Posted on February 2, 2013, in 2013, An Artist's Life, Black Paintings, Creative Process, Gods and Monsters, Inspiration, Studio, Working methods and tagged "as good as I can get it", 25 years old, 29 years old, a better artist, active duty, Art Business, artist, attention to detail, aviator, background, Boeing 727 flight engineer, challenge, craft, creating, darkroom, discipline, enjoy, Flying, focused, goal-oriented, inform, keep up, license, meticulous, naval officer, Navy, New York artist, paintings, photographs, printing, qualities, rating, sensibility, shooting, social media, solitary hours, Studio, work, yesterday. Bookmark the permalink. 2 Comments.
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That’s an amazing background, Barbara! I had once thought of taking flying lessons. I have never been in the military, but I (and probably other non-inititates) think of the military as all about taking orders, following the guidebook/rulebook, so I can’t help wonder about your statement that the military made you *goal oriented.* Please give an example so that I can understand?
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Marie, as a Commander(to keep the story short, I left out telling how after I left active duty, I stayed in the Navy Reserve and retired as a Commander), I was on the order-GIVING side. I still miss the days when I just had to ask someone to do a job once. Then they not only did it, but they usually did it superbly, far beyond my expectations. The Navy is all about planning, setting goals, and whatever the task at hand, taking a high degree of responsibility by doing the best work you can.
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