Wednesday, December 12, 2007

A little while later...

Ever have a great plan then as you are executing you get sidetracked?? Yeah, well I think that happened with my blog here. I am not that old but I think that I have a difficult time grasping the Kerouacian style. I want my words to be so polished. However this media is about the moment and the evolution of thought rather than the presentation of completed thoughts.

So be it.

I pick up where I left off. I am a green marine. I served in the Marines for 4 years (1993-1997). During that time I thought about the rest of my life. What did I want it to add up to? Inspired by my parents, my high school and the overall political climate, I decided to invest my time and money into an education in alternative energy. Now I work as an engineer at a hydrogen fuel cell company. I hope that my efforts will help to move our country away from fossil fuels. Of course there is a LOT of work to be done. For me the question is, who's going to do the work? Who has the skill sets required to imagine, develop and market new technologies?

My answer: Anyone who has the knowledge and the motivation.

Where does my motivation come from?

For me it is the convergence of three sources: parents, high school and overseas deployment.

First my parents are alumni of the University of California at Berkely (Class of 1968). They are hippies (or at least former hippies). Key to my upbringing were the things that they taught me about global consciousness, environmentalism and economics. Later at Garfield High School in Seattle (a math-science "magnet" school), I re-enforced the environmentalism training but it was infused with a special dose of economics. At that time there was a large political debate over logging and the old-growth forest. Despite the very liberal leanings of Seattle, our ecology teacher took us on a field trip to "meet the loggers". We were taught about both sides of the debate and shown our hypocracy. It was that field trip that pushed me toward the Marines. I knew that the arguements could not be settled unless there was trust, trust must be earned and I needed to earn some trust. Voilla! Marine Corps. I was the only vegan in my platoon! Finally in 1996 I traveled to the Persian Gulf. It was there that I witnessed the size of our force. I began to comprehend the hidden cost of our gasoline. I realized that we were never going to change our habits. We never do! We didn't stop using gasoline when we found out the dangers of lead, we just took the lead out. We didn't stop using aresol cans when we found out about the ozone layer depletion, we just invented a different kind of aresol. I was inspired to become an engineer, to work on developing a new technology to replace oil.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Your motivation and commitment is unique. It is easy to think that many people go into the military instead of college or go so that they can use the GI Bill to go to college. But I wonder, especially with recent events, what the actual trend is... the number/percentage of individuals completing military assignments and then completing a degree. It is well known that Vietnam vets faced harsh realities and many difficulties returning home but I worry that people today won't remember and don't realize that the soldiers returning from the current war know what they are fighting for only to return home to homelessness, without jobs, and emotionally spent.