Single Harness©

Your neighbor’s memoir…you just never know.

by Millard Avon Gregory


Formats

Softcover
$14.95
Hardcover
$23.99
E-Book
$3.99
Softcover
$14.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 4/4/2014

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 130
ISBN : 9781496900098
Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 130
ISBN : 9781496900081
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 130
ISBN : 9781496900074

About the Book

Single Harness© Synopsis First one went down smooth…way too smooth…and before I could say that’ll do it Michael had already done it again for us all. And then Marlboro and DR swiveled around and asked me to stand for the Presentation. I said what presentation, and even Michael asked me to stand for the Presentation. So I stood up and Michael pretty much came to attention behind the bar as he’d been in on it from earlier that day. Marlboro pulled out a piece of Delta Airlines stationary on which he’d printed block letters by scratching the lines over and over, DR placed a paper bag on the bar, and Marlboro read from the sheet: It is with the highest honor that we hereby present The Inaugural General Spicer Medal For SOA wwwhbddwmg With that, DR pulled a 10” Buck Knife in its leather sheath from the bag and they both presented it to me. The “certificate” is long gone, but the Buck Knife has been with me for 35 years or so and is in my briefcase as I’m writing this. It is and always has been…since that evening at the Bahamian…the most valuable thing I own. And in case you haven’t figured it out: SOA stood for Saving Our Ass, and the letters below meant: “wherein we would have been dead ducks without Millard Gregory”. I’d had the opportunity a few weeks before and luckily it had gone OK. Those Angels again. Getting to that evening on Key Biscayne was impossible for a kid from rural southern Indiana…except it happened. It began at 6 years old in a giant State Park managed by my Granddad, to Scouting, to sports, to college, to being paid to skydive, to volunteering for the Army in ’66 after my Junior year. And then those Angles took over. Purely by the luck of the draw I met a Master Sergeant and a Captain involved in recruiting 18 men for intensive training aimed at Special Missions, and after spending most of 2 days with them they invited me to “consider a different path”. Along the way cherry bombs rolled down the aisle of a beatnik joint, a boulder was placed in the top of a tree, indelible impression was made by both Spud and Squid Marlow, and a 63’ Wheeler motor yacht was kept together by “the worms holding hands”. And after all the training and the formation of our Teams and a good number of Missions we learned how, if you were so inclined, to turn a Dove into a Hawk: Show them pictures of what we saw being done in rooms where screams could not be heard, and in rooms where those in power wanted the screams to be heard by others for effect, all around the globe. They’ll get it…I’ve seen it happen…and they’ll never really sleep again. Ever have the rain end exactly half way back your motorcoach? Or watch a home slide into the Pacific for what seemed to be a good reason in those days? Or break a Team Member out of a jail in Piedras Negras? No? How about having that same Team Member save your life in a dirt alley bar a year or 2 later? Then you may not have learned to ignore most any injury until you get back to secure care. You might not even have had to set your own arm with a rope and a tree…and then complete a Mission. If it all sounds dramatic, it wasn’t. It was just what we did to have some fun and to keep going back. The focus, for 24 years, was simply the next Mission, and there was always a next one. After hiking so many nights off of the Blue Ridge Parkway in the Grandfather Mountain area, and spending February weeks up in the Beartooth Wilderness with a horse and a pack horse, and logging 182 jumps with 114 of them at night, the toughest thing I’ve done is to be the last of our 18 alive. Good news is that there’s a Plan: no grey rooms, no tubes and 24 hour beeps, but instead a fast trip to the Yellowstone Country, and a horse that will find his way back to the barn. A cat caused me to write Single Harness, to surprise my Colonel with some of what we did between Missions (it didn’t surprise him), and it is dedicated to the 17 and to all who have served. The complete title is “Single Harness, Your neighbor’s memoir…you just never know”. and we really don’t. We see people as they are when we meet them, and if they are in their 60s or 70s or 80s we can easily miss what they did at an earlier time. They may have proved the same thing as Single Harness themselves: that anything is possible. Reviews: Not too many generations ago Americans knew what single harness meant. It referred to an animal-usually a horse- being of strength and temperament to function alone. The term was also applied to people and it referred to “character”. Being of skill, strength, and character sufficient to function alone: what a concept. But this ability is far the more unusual when there is risk to life and limb. And in the author’s life, there was grave risk. I have the true honor of knowing the author. A man of character. Of strength. Of intelligence. Of humor. A hero. In “Single Harness”. Dr. Adkins Internist I am fortunate to be a long-time friend of this author. I know his sense of honor, his bravery and his fearless character. Single Harness is a wonderfully entertaining account of his (not uneventful) life. It is also the amazing story of what happened after he answered his Country’s call. Thanks to a courageous man for finally telling his story. It is a beautifully written and exciting account of what can be--and at times must be--accomplished by brave men, even when doing so is difficult, and their lives are on the line. P. Lach Legal Management


About the Author

Single Harness© is presented while maintaining certain confidentialities. The reasons are: 1. oaths preclude inviting questions; and: 2. while this is a memoir and dedicated to our people back then, it’s with the greatest respect for those currently serving and all who have served. I always think of Millard as a businessman's businessman. He's moved from one success to another. Now that I know a little more about his story, I have to be impressed. How does a guy regularly disappear to serve our country for weeks at a time AND still build a successful company? Over achiever would seem to be the word. His writing style is down home, just like he is, yet his story, if fully revealed, would make a new generation of James Bond books. Single Harness will give you a glimpse into a fascinating life well lived. B. Ashley Corporate CEO