STF

Counselor's Office - CAG Interview

Posted Oct. 4, 2022, 10:04 a.m. by Lieutenant Colonel Krin "Hannibal" Lardel (Commander, Air Group (CAG)) (James Sinclair)

Posted by Lieutenant Colonel Krin “Hannibal” Lardel (Commander, Air Group (CAG)) in Counselor’s Office - CAG Interview

Posted by Lieutenant LeKeitah Naisyr (Counselor) in Counselor’s Office - CAG Interview

Posted by Lieutenant Colonel Krin “Hannibal” Lardel (Commander, Air Group (CAG)) in Counselor’s Office - CAG Interview
Posted by… suppressed (6) by the Post Ghost! 👻
The Marine Aviator made his way through the Chimera. Having changed out of his flight suit and into his duty uniform of deep kelly green, he took the turbolift to the drck with his destination: the ship’s Counselor. It was unusual that a Marine would check in with the Counselor, but Hannibal had a philosophy when working on Fleet vessels: minimize differences to maximize cooperation. Marines weren’t required to have a psych assessment upon arrival… the majority of Counselors from the Fleet side of things most often lacked the specialized training to provide that service to Marines anyway. But Lardel knew that the Fkeet personnel sometimes resented the Marines not having to do that, so he was here to make sure that didn’t happen.

Arriving at the door to the counseling suite, he pressed the chime and tugged his uniform top straight.

Lardel, CAG

Not sure who was at her door, Keitah looked up from her console, stood from her desk, and walked over to the door to greet her visitor. After the door to her office slid open, she stood there with a welcoming smile and said, “Hello. Is there something I can do for you?”

Naisyr, Counselor

The Zakdorn Marine nodded and said “Lieutenant. I am Lieutenant Colonel Krin Lardel, Star Fleet Marine Corps. I am the Commanding Officer of the 214th Fighter Wing that just arrived. I was hoping to have a moment of your time to discuss a morale and welfare issue.”

Lardel, CAG

“Oh, yes, for sure. Come in.” She stepped aside so he could enter the office. “First, welcome to the Chimera. It’s such an honor to be serving with an elite team of Marines.”
She walked over to a table that was surrounded by four chairs, pulled one out and sat as she invited Lt. Col. Lardel to do the same. “So you think there is an issue with morale and welfare?”

Naisyr, Counselor

Lardel sat and smiled. “No. I don’t. At least… not yet. But I have been at this for a long time, Counselor. Anytime a Marine group arrives on a Fleet vessel, there is friction. Both directions, neither side has a monopoly on being jerks. But I wanted to try something a bit different this time. See, Marine regulations don’t specify that we must check in with a Counselor upon arrival. In fact… Marines just don’t in general. We have very specialized therapists that are utilized for post-operational needs… but we don’t have afloat Counselors. And that tends to rub a lot of Fleeters the wrong way. They get pissed we don’t have to go to the Counselor and they do. So I wanted to know two things: First, are you specifically trained for counseling Marines? And second: how you would feel about adding a few hundred extra files to your workload and we, the Marines of the Two Hundred Fourteenth Fighter Group, will each check in with you for assessment? Our way of kind of bridging the gap between Fleet and Corps.”

Lardel, CAG

“I would not say that I specially trained to counsel Marines. I mean, when I was training to do this it was my understanding that there were few of you. However, that doesn’t mean I cannot do it and I welcome the workload. I very good when it comes to empathy and can project all three types. I like to think I was born and trained to understand not just people but the majority of all beings. I have a question. I am curious about how do you think counseling Marines will be different from counseling Starfleet officers?” It was a honest question. The Lt. Col. already seems to have some insight into the mindset of the Marines and she wanted to leverage what he knew.

Naisyr, Counselor

Lardel nodded. “Good question, Doc. See, Marines are not like Star Fleet. Our missions are wholly and completely different, and therefore require a different mindset. That needed mindset attracts personalities that are not like what Fleet looks for. For the Marines, we look for aggressiveness… stubbornness… and the ability to take orders without question. Star Fleet encourages discourse, a questioning mind… curiosity and the ability to take the time to try and find common ground with others. And thats fantastic, don’t get me wrong. But the Marines…” and he payse for a moment and leaned back in thought.

“The Marines are strictly a combat organization, Doctor. Where Star Fleet has large Science and Diplomatic sections, we don’t. Because that isn’t our purpose. Our purpose is simple and straight forward: bring the fight to the enemy and win. Star Fleet is, by its very nature, a ‘fighting is the last resort’ group. The Marines are the exact opposite. We exist to fight, not explore. We exist to destroy, not build. We exist to enforce the peace through the threat of the unerring application of extreme violence. That is not the Star Fleet way… nor should it be. But when you deal with Marines, you are going to be talking to individuals who are mission-centric, inflexible, proud to the point of arrogance some say, and who are ready and willing to take up arms against a threat at any time and any place. We are warriors… fighters… and we hold ourselves to a standard set forth hundreds of years ago that we maintain to this very day. Honor… Courage… Commitment. Those are the Corps values and every Marine holds them above all else.” and Lardel laughed softly. “There was Fleet starship Captain once who said ‘Star Fleet is a business. The Marines are a cult.’” and he chuckled again. “He really wasn’t too far off the mark. Marines are dedicated to a level that a lot of Fleet people find unnerving. And we are adamant in our dedication. Its a mindset that you may find off-putting, Doctor. But it’s a mindset that we cultivate. That we strive to maintain because it helps keep us focused and helps us maintain our discipline. And its not something many non-Marines can grasp.”

Lardel, CAG

“I see.” Said Keitah as she thought about everything the Lt. Col. had laid out. “Well I think I can handle it even though I am sure it’s going to be mentally exhausting. Do you have any personnel files you can share with me so I can prepare? Also are you open to doing the first evaluation?” She said with raised eyebrows and a smile. “I mean you can start paving the road for your Marines.”

Naisyr, Counselor

Lardel smiled and said “Files are logged and ready for your review, Doc. Made sure you had access before I came. As for me, absolutely. I’m ready and willing whenever you are.” The CAG seemed almost eager for the review, something that wasn’t a common reaction.

Lardel, CAG

bump


Posts on USS Chimera

In topic

Posted since


© 1991-2024 STF. Terms of Service

Version 1.15.9