Service Before Self Isn’t About Burning Yourself Down—It’s About the Profession We Chose
Your team didn’t wake up cynical.
They learned it.
When standards feel flexible, decisions feel opaque, and feedback feels empty, people stop believing the process is about performance. They start believing it’s about proximity.
That’s when effort drops, trust erodes, and your program earns a label you never intended: a good ole boy process.
If your best people are disengaging, the issue isn’t motivation.
It’s the system they’ve experienced.
LEADER SELF-ASSESSMENT CHECKLIST
Use this to pressure-test any awards, development, stratification, or selection process you own.
Clarity
Are the standards clearly defined, published, and understood before the cycle begins?
Could a junior member articulate what “right” looks like without guessing?
Consistency
Are standards applied the same way regardless of name, rank, or relationship?
Would similar performance produce similar outcomes across the board?
Transparency
Can you explain how decisions were made without hiding behind generalities?
Do participants understand not just what happened, but why?
Feedback
Does every participant receive specific, actionable feedback tied to observable performance?
Would that feedback help them improve for the next cycle?
Documentation
Are decisions recorded in a way that can be reviewed and defended later?
Could another leader step in and understand the rationale without re-creating it?
Alignment
Do the behaviors you reward clearly reinforce mission execution, professionalism, and trust?
Are you developing people, or just selecting winners?
Trust Check
If outcomes were shared without names attached, would they still make sense?
Would you be comfortable explaining the results to the person who fell just short?
If you answered “no” or hesitated on more than one of these, your process may already be teaching lessons you never intended.
Fix the process, and you fix the perception.
Protect the process, and you protect the culture.
Real talk for real Airmen. I drop blunt, battle-tested insight on leadership, excellence, discipline, and the warrior ethos.
No fluff, no shortcuts, no easy bus. Just the truth, the standard, and how to rise above average. Charge into the storm & Stay hard to kill.
Stay in the Fight: Building Mental Durability for Airmen
In this episode of The Informed Airman, we dig into what it really means to be ready for the fight, and to stay in it.
Chief Vaden sits down with Capt Sam Alex, U.S. Air Force Clinical Psychologist, to break down the mental and emotional foundations every Airman needs to endure and perform under pressure.
Together they unpack:
How to build a strong psychological foundation that supports mission readiness.
What it means to be resistant and durable — not just resilient after the fact.
Why “coping ugly” can actually be a healthy, adaptive response when life hits hard.
How leaders can create environments where toughness includes transparency.
Capt Alex also shares insights from current research and key readings, including:
📘 The End of Trauma by George A. Bonanno
📄 Nature Human Behaviour: Resilience and Recovery After Stress
Whether you’re an Airman in the arena or a leader guiding others through it, this episode is about staying mission-ready: mind, body, and spirit.
🦅 🦬 Be the Buffalo. Face the Storm. Hard to Kill.
What if more mental health providers never show up?
I’m not saying we don’t need them; we absolutely do. But what if they just… don’t due to lack of resources?
In this episode of The Informed Airman, we talk about facing that reality head-on: how to stop waiting for a rescue that might never arrive and start preparing yourself, and your tribe, for the storm that’s already here.
This isn’t about toughness for toughness’ sake. It’s about ownership. About building your tribe before the fight, not during it. About forming the kind of bonds, discipline, and trust that keep you in the fight long after the first punch lands.
Because resilience isn’t built in PowerPoints or programs, it’s built in people.
So don’t wait for help to show up. Be the help. Build your tribe. Face the fight.
Stay strong. Stay connected. Stay Hard to Kill.
Fam,
Y’all know the deal, no music, no fluff, straight to the point like we always do! This is a GREAT one that everyone can take valuable insight from and be better because she was willing to share her JET (Judgement, Experience, and Training)!
“The Backbone Speaks” with TSgt Calvert
Being an NCO isn’t for the faint of heart. It’s a calling that comes with opportunity, responsibility, pressure, and reward, all at once.
TSgt Calvert takes you behind the stripes to talk about what it really means to wear them…
➡️ Leading when it’s hard.
➡️ Balancing the mission and the people.
➡️ Owning the standard, even when no one’s watching.
➡️ And remembering why it’s worth it, every single day.
💡 Whether you’re a brand-new Staff Sergeant or a seasoned Technical Sergeant, this one will hit home.
🔥 Tune in, reflect, and remember why we lead from the front.
🎧 Listen now on your favorite platform.
#BeTheBuffalo #TheBackboneSpeaks #NCOCharge #Leadership #AirForce #HardToKill #EarnItEveryDay #WarfighterMindset
There’s a lot of noise out there about standards, which ones matter, which ones don’t, and whether leadership really
supports those who enforce them.
Here’s the truth: Every standard matters.
Some may not seem directly tied to launching aircraft, securing networks, or defending the base, but every single one
reinforces the discipline, trust, and professionalism that make the mission possible. Uniform appearance, customs and
courtesies, on-time reports, none of those tasks win wars alone, but they form the foundation of how we fight. If we get
comfortable skipping “the small stuff,” the cracks spread into bigger things that eventually do cost readiness and
credibility.
We are members of the Profession of Arms. That title carries weight. It means we live by standards that may not always
make sense to outsiders, but they exist to preserve something greater than convenience, they preserve trust. When we
signed up, we accepted a covenant with our nation and each other. Our Core Values: Integrity First, Service Before Self,
and Excellence in All We Do, aren’t slogans; they’re the spine of every standard we uphold.
I get it, some standards feel disconnected from the mission at first glance; but that’s where leaders step in. It’s our
responsibility to bridge that gap for all our Airmen, to explain the “why,” to connect the dots between discipline today
and mission success tomorrow. When we do that, standards become less about control and more about commitment. If
we walk past a problem, we don’t just accept it, we rewrite the standard. And that new standard is unacceptable.
Leadership is about being kind, not nice. Nice ignores problems. Kind steps in, corrects with respect, and develops
people in the process.
So, I’m calling on every Airman: Uphold the standard, teach the standard, and support those doing it right. Leaders are
the calm in the storm, the professional presence that reminds your formation, this is what right looks like.
Tactical Takeaway:
Every standard exists for a reason. Connect the “why,” enforce with dignity, and model what it means to be a
professional Airman every day.
Focus This Week:
Don’t Wait, LEAD Your Team Through the Storm!
More Resources Here:
https://linktr.ee/theinformedairman
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1I2faP_RRPd7Yh3MwUsWCWVZbdfgHkBvk/view?usp=drivesdk
🛻 From the Cab — Real Talk:
What’s up, fam. Sitting here in the truck, and I just felt like I needed to say this… There’s a lot going on right now. Life, the mission, the uncertainty, and it can all pile up fast. But listen… this is not the time to go silent.
If you’re feeling the weight, financial stress, burnout, or just that invisible load we all carry; please don’t wait for someone to come find you. Raise your hand. Reach out. Talk to somebody. You owe that to yourself and to the ones who love you.
You didn’t create the chaos, but you can fight through it. And you’re not alone in this fight, not now, not ever. We take care of our own.
So yeah, it’s tough, but we’ll get through this together. We always do.
Keep it real. Stay grounded. Stay Hard to Kill.
#HardToKill #WarhawkMindset #Resilience #OneTeamOneFight #KeepItReal #BuffaloMindset
Recording of the newest edition of the USAF’s Enlisted Force Structure (EFS).
Read it here:
Listen in as we walk through a deeply personal story—from the mountain top of success to a crushing fall, and ultimately, the climb back through resilience, faith, and hard-earned lessons with David DeJesus!
More FREE resources here:
Discussion between NCOs, SNCOs and CGOs about leadership topics and leader responsibilities.
📝 Article:
Candid conversation with Chief McCool, the Pacific Air Forces Command Chief about her advice to SNCOs and their importance to our Air Force’s lethality!
How to use the Mission-Resource-Risk (MRR) method to analyze your mission and answer the “hard questions” from higher!
The Informed Airman
🛑 👀 for the shortcut and put in the WORK!
Developing Others: Air Force Professional Development (MPAs & ALQs)
https://www.af.mil/Portals/1/documents/2025SAF/Units_of_Action_Reference_Sheet.pdf
Reoptimization for Great Power Competition
https://www.af.mil/reoptimization-for-great-power-competition/
https://www.af.mil/News/Article-Display/Article/3908057/usaf-units-of-action-combat-wings-air-base-wings-institutional-wings-defined/
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USAF Units of Action: Combat Wings, Air Base Wings, Institutional Wings defined
Published Sept. 17, 2024
The Department of the Air Force implementation of a new construct that will evolve wings into cohesive Units of Action by separating into Combat Wings, Air Base Wings and Institutional Wings will be a phased approach, starting no later than the summer of 2025.
The new concept will create several organizations capable of conducting deployed combat operations, as well as base defense. Under this future construct, base, institutional and combat missions will transition into distinct organizations – called Institutional Wings and Combat Wings – each with separate commanders.
Air Force combat wings will be structured as mission-ready Units of Action, with all the necessary elements stationed together at the same installation, where they can train together on a day-to-day basis.
Deployable Combat Wings will evolve to deploy as fully trained teams and will replace the Expeditionary Air Base and Air Task Force models previously announced in Sept. 2023.
Combat Wings will focus on mission-level warfighting readiness, supported by Air Base Wings who are focused on power projection platform readiness (the installation).
Institutional wings will continue to provide support and capabilities essential to the organize, train and equip requirements of the U.S. Air Force.
The goal is 24 Deployable Combat Wings fielded to meet the Air Force’s rotational demands and provide depth for emerging crises – 16 Active Duty and 8 Reserve Component Wings.
The phased implementation approach includes:
Establishing Air Base Wings at installations that host Combat Wings and/or Institutional Wings with supported/supporting relationships.
Establish the deployable variant of the combat wing: the Deployable Combat Wing. Each DCW will have a redesigned concept of support for GPC schemes of maneuver, including Agile Combat Employment, to ensure the wings are prepared to execute their wartime functions and missions with assigned Airmen and units.
The Air Force will begin deliberately implementing Combat Wings, Air Base Wings and Institutional Wings across the force as early as summer 2025. The first Combat Wings should be ready to deploy elements by late 2026 (FY27).
Evolution from XAB to ATF to CW
In 2023, the Air Force established the Expeditionary Air Base (XAB) as an initial force presentation model in its transition from Air Expeditionary Wings to a future force presentation model. The Air Force has been deploying Airmen under the XAB construct since the fall of 2023 and will continue to do so in the coming years.
The first Air Task Forces entered the AFFORGEN cycle during the reset phase in the summer of 2024 and will become deployment-ready in the fall of 2025. These initial ATFs will replace some of the XABs as the US Air Force’s deployable unit of action.
During this pilot period, the Air Force will deploy Airmen using both the XAB and ATF force presentation models. Concurrently, the Combat Wing, Air Base Wing and Institutional Wing phased approach will begin. Combat Wings will replace ATFs and XABs.
Leadership can make or break the team!
Let’s all just live life being a good human, showing love, kindness, grace, and mercy!