A SOLDIER'S PERSPECTIVE
THE WEB'S LEADING MILITARY BLOG SINCE 2004
I found this story from November 07 and can’t believe it’s taken me six months to find it. It’s very motivational. I like that the story includes all first responders and along with the military.
By Associated Press
MICHAEL HILLAn infantryman charges a pillbox in the face of enemy fire. A firefighter rushes up the stairwell of a burning skyscraper as office workers flee. A teacher shields her student from a schoolyard gunman with her body.
Heroes all. But what personal qualities made them heroic?
In the movies, heroes are charismatic rebels played by the likes of Will Smith or Bruce Willis. But researchers who surveyed decorated World War II veterans found not all heroes are cut from the same swashbuckling cloth. Quiet types with a sense of loyalty and selflessness often have the right stuff, too.
”We often think of the gung-ho, John Wayne ‘Sands of Iwo Jima’ kind of hero driven to combat,” said researcher Brian Wansink of Cornell University. ”But there’s a whole lot of these heroes that are much more along the lines of that Captain Miller character Tom Hanks played in ‘Saving Private Ryan’ _ the reluctant high school English teacher.”
In a paper to be published in the management-oriented journal The Leadership Quarterly, researchers asked 526 World War II veterans who experienced ”heavy and frequent combat” to evaluate themselves on qualities such as leadership, loyalty, spontaneity and selflessness. There were 83 men in the group who received a medal for meritorious service or valor – either a Bronze Star, Silver Star, Distinguished Service Cross or Medal of Honor.
Unsurprisingly, veterans who had been awarded medals tended to rate themselves higher for qualities like leadership, adventurousness and adaptability. Results became more intriguing when researchers divided medal earners into two groups: those who enlisted (”eager heroes”) and those who were drafted (”reluctant heroes”). The reluctant heroes scored higher than any other group in selflessness and working well with others.
The study suggests that quiet heroes rely on a deep sense of duty and esprit de corps as opposed to derring-do. That sentiment was echoed by several of the medal-earning veterans interviewed separately for this story.
To a man, they downplayed any notion of heroism.



Shannon H. Pennington
Having a background in the military as a regular and reservist along with 26 years as a professional fire fighter I can resonate with what the author has written here. I was honored to have served with so many soldiers and fire fighters who went quietly about their jobs without thinking of their service or the details of their work as being anything less than their duty to perform. Everyday and in every way I was constantly amongst those who dared to be themselves and in that they gave the best of what they were without asking to be recognized nor honored by being selected for promotions without the merit of having earned them to be the deciding factor. In the days and months and years beyond 911 we have seen those quiet souls step up to the plate and take our country beyond the grief hopelessness and despair of what happened and turned us as a country around. We have seen the youth of today make their mark and face the challenge of America at risk in a world full of those who would destroy our values and our country. Those people who took on the job of protecting us have made their mark inside each of us as citizens of a proud and free nation. They all are my heros….and the article without much effort has said exactly that……
firefighterveteran.com/
North American Fire Fighter Veterans Network
F.I.R.S.T. S.T.E.P. H.O.P.E.
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