Teamwork
Heroes Remember
Transcript
Interviewer: In military situations, tell me about teamwork.
Well you are an individual amongst a section, it could be ten
to thirteen, fifteen people. Your section is part of a platoon,
thirty to forty people, your platoon. You're part of this larger
unit. Someone can die as a result of, of your decisions or
indecision, or inactivity. So you can cost not only your life
but the lives of other people. And you absolutely need their
trust, they need your trust, and you cannot do anything, ever,
to take that trust down. So, you go into battle, or you go
wherever, you need that trust, and you, you need to be a part
of that team, and that's the absolute first thing that the
military teaches you. You check to some regards your individual
perspective, you check that at the door. You're part of a team.
Some people can understand that if they're part of a football
team, or hockey team, or even a police force or a fireman.
You work as a team, and you, it, it, it is no longer yourself.
It is your buddies, 'cause you better go to the end of the world
for them because they better go to the end of the world for you
as well. So you cannot have, when you are in a rather unique
situation, you can not have someone, an individual going off.
It just, it just, it simply can't happen. There is no other
alternative. I don't like this, I'm going to stop now.
No, ‘cause you just, as a result of your decision to not
participate, or your, your, it has to be decisive and that's what
the military teaches you. You need to do this now. And without
a question those five or ten people are going to turn around
and do whatever you instruct them to do, now, without a question.
That's the fundamentals of the military.
Description
Mr. O’Loan speaks about teamwork and why it is so crucial.
Timothy O’Loan
Mr. O'Loan was born in Edmonton in 1965. He grew up in a military family as his father, mother and brother all served in the Canadian Forces. Growing up in a military family he moved quite frequently but says his roots are in the north. At the age of sixteen he decided he was going to keep up the family tradition and join the services. He signed up when he was seventeen and served for 10 years. After leaving the forces he moved back to the north where he now works with the government on Aboriginal events.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 02:10
- Person Interviewed:
- Timothy O’Loan
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Canadian Armed Forces
- Location/Theatre:
- Canada
- Branch:
- Army
- Units/Ship:
- Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry (PPCLI)
- Rank:
- Corporal
- Occupation:
- Infantry
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