Avatar of Andrew Blade
  • Last Seen: 6 yrs ago
  • Joined: 6 yrs ago
  • Posts: 127 (0.05 / day)
  • VMs: 3
  • Username history
    1. Andrew Blade 6 yrs ago
  • Latest 10 profile visitors:

Status

Recent Statuses

6 yrs ago
Current At the age of 30, I got rid of my smart phone and switched back to my flip phone. I've used the same one for the last two years. Battery lasts for a week.
1 like
6 yrs ago
I was told Avengers was mind-blowing, the best Marvel movie to date. I hear some stuff happens that fans are upset about though. That may change things for some people.
1 like
6 yrs ago
Meh. I like to bounce around.
1 like
6 yrs ago
Just because I have a Captain America tattoo on my shoulder, that does not mean I'm a manchild. It's my love for juvenile humor and poor decision-making skills that define my manchildness,,,
3 likes
6 yrs ago
If you don't like Pinkie Pie as a grown-ass man, then you shut your normie mouth and sit the fuck down.

Bio

I'm 32. Married, 3 kids. I've been roleplaying online since I was 14-ish. Started with chat rooms, then forums in my late teens. I graduated with a bachelor's degree in criminal justice a few years ago after going back to school online following a disastrous attempt at college (18-20) when I first graduated high school. I spent some time bouncing around crappy jobs, then enlisted in the national guard when I was 22. I deployed to Afghanistan about two and a half years later as an airborne infantryman. I came home in 2011 and bounced around a few jobs. I spent a lot of time working as a security officer for the public school system and mentoring young kids that didn't have much in the way of positive adult male figures in their lives. I'm still enlisted, I now work for the marketing department of an insurance company as I strive to purchase a house.

I like to think I specialize in modern, realistic settings, though I'm open to everything if it catches my interest. I have an enthusiastic interest in most forms of combat and a background in mixed martial arts and self-defense, as well as both the use and construction of firearms. I'm a big comic book enthusiast, particularly a fan of Captain America. I read a lot of Vince Flynn's American Assassin series. I play video games when my family gives me the chance, but nothing very serious. I host Dungeons & Dragons at my house every other Sunday with a handful of friends. If I think of anything else, I probably won't add it, but you can sure ask me about myself anytime you like.

Most Recent Posts

Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, Ramstein Air Base, Germany.

The last few days (or was it weeks?) had been hard to keep track of. Sergeant Chambers remembered their patrol had discovered evidence of a bomb-making facility in the tiny village they'd been sent to investigate. Before they were able to start apprehending potential suspects, gunfire and explosions rang out. From there, he could recall he had been shouting and directing his squad to cover, then calling in to his platoon sergeant to set up suppressive fire. After that, it was a blur. He knew that he had engaged targets with aimed shots, and that at least one of his men had been hit by sniper fire. He also remembered getting hit more than once, but everything was such chaos, he couldn't remember if it had been a bullet, a grenade, or something else that had brought him down. Something had hit his plates, he remembered feeling the brutal thump, but then other things had broken skin, and from the sensation of pain he could remember, likely bone.

His men had gotten him into an MRAP, and a little later some medics had hovered over him. Then there was a helicopter ride. Then he was in a hospital. He didn't remember being lucid whenever he awoke- a lot like waking up several times in a night but going right back to sleep after.

At least he was somewhere safe, though. He knew that, and it allowed him to relax, as much as he could, anyway. Pain seemed to emanate from all over his body, but it felt distant, like he was feeling it from far away. Opening his eyes, Sergeant Chambers looked around and took in a sterile environment with dim lights and a Thomas Kincaid painting on the wall. He was propped up in an uncomfortable bed with tubes and wires and some kind of apparatus attached to him. He felt something restraining his arms and legs, and when he looked, his right leg was lifted up off the bed, with small cables coming from it. A sling held his right arm against his chest, with a heavy, cold pack wrapped around his shoulder, while his left arm was in a full cast stemming from his palm all the way up to his shoulder.

As soon as he saw the extent of the damage, the pain started to hit him, with a dull ache coming from both his arms and his chest, but strangely enough, he couldn't feel any pain in his knee. Looking at the bandaged and casted-up limb, the gears in his head started to turn and he glared at his foot, propped up at eye level. Gritting his teeth, he willed his toes to wiggle, but nothing happened. In horror, his eyes darted to his right leg- which seemed to be uninjured beneath a blanket- and he tried to lift his knee. Again, no response.

Immediately his mouth went dry and he could feel his heart racing. He wanted to call out, but he didn't think anyone would hear him. looking down at the arm draped across his chest in a sling, he saw a remote control under his wrist and tried to maneuver himself to grab it, but his shoulder was so stiff and sore that he broke out into a sweat just trying to turn and shift his forearm. Tears of frustration, rage, and panic began to stream from his eyes. His fingers were working, and he used them to painfully try to walk his hand toward the remote attached to the frame of his bed with a thick power cord.

Before he was able to find and grab it, though, the door to his room quickly opened, spilling in light from the hallway outside, and a woman in pale blue scrubs rushed toward him. He looked up at her with confusion, terror, and anger in his eyes. Chambers mouth opened, but he didn't know if he wanted to ask a question- too many flooded his mind at once- or say something to express his frustration. All he could muster was an incoherent strangled gasp that just managed to escape his dry throat.

@honorandpride
OOC Post
@foster
Extra-banned for suggesting you made a joke, when- in all reality- it was a poorly veiled attempt to pretend you could do subtle humor.

It's not subtle if it's only in your head.

@luna_maria

Also extra-banned for using ALL CAPS and not appreciating anatomical humor.
Banned for: using the word "colon" and not making a joke about it.

Me and my group will likely be on the road shortly. I think Dean is going to decide to get a jump on the rest of civilization before real panic takes over.
Yeah, we're going to be flying solo in our own little stories for awhile, until someone's characters have the gumption to leave home so we can have interactions.


Mine was never set to stay put in one place for very long, I'm sure I'll be on the road before too long.
Damn, we are scattered. NY, TX, NV, NE, wherever Oakwood is, and wherever the cult nut-jobs are.

Man... Super-Volcanoes and Nuclear war...





Damn! So much for being near everybody else!

Good call not taking my suggestion on Wyoming though :/

Edit: Also, I have to wonder if you guys with a ton of NPC's have ever played Overlord.
Driving home from work, Dean Westin cursed at traffic. Anxiety used to creep up inside of him when he was stuck in gridlock- a side-effect of his time in the Middle East that he had worked hard at pushing down- but this was new and different. After Toba, and California, and worries about Yellowstone, the U.S. Army Staff Sergeant began to wonder how long before panic set in here in Omaha. Scenes from disaster movies filled his imagination in exactly situations like this- stuck in traffic, desperate to get somewhere, either to escape the city or get to his family- and unable to do anything about it.

Since he was a teenager, Westin had decided he would never be helpless. To him, that meant learning to be able to protect himself and defeat any threat in any situation. Years of mixed martial arts training, including Muay Thai; Brazilian Jiu Jitsu; Shootwrestling; and Wing Chun, were paired with a sprinkling of Maphilindo Silat and Sayoc Kali to provide him with the tools to fight with his bare hands as well as edged and blunt weapons. His parents had never been big fans of guns, though they didn't discourage against them either. If he wanted to expand his skill-set to include firearms, he needed to make a decision. After 9/11, though, that choice was made fairly easy. Military service had skipped a generation in his family- with both of his grandfather's serving during Vietnam in different capacities, one in the navy, the other the air force. After watching the towers fall, a deep sense of duty to protect the innocent and prevent any further tragedies like that spurred him to join, the only Westin in two generations to volunteer to serve. Even though he wasn't old enough to enlist until several years later, that fire had still burned in him, and off he went to seek out and bring pain to those that wished to cause more of the same carnage he vowed to fight.

His time in the military only bolstered his mindset of physical preparation for physical violence, this time coupling battlefield tactics ranging across a variety of terrain and situations with an array of weapons and equipment. When his active duty contract came up, he elected to switch over to the civilian side of things, but signed on with the national guard in his wife's home state of Nebraska. After settling here, he found himself fascinated with apocalypse scenarios that seemed to be gaining in popularity with mainstream culture. When he had served on active duty, the idea of facing a natural disaster seemed to have a pretty simple solution centered around the military base he operated out of. Now as a part-time soldier and civilian, he was realizing that if things were to go completely pear-shaped, he would have to rely on his own supplies and equipment.

Confident in his training, he supplemented his knowledge and skills with weapons and supplies based on the education he'd been given by the Army. Some called him a prepper. It wasn't a term he preferred, but he accepted it. He didn't have a bunker, or a plan to raise rabbits a source of food, or even the skill with a bow and arrow to take down large game when society had collapsed and so much time had gone by that firearms were no longer a viable option to hunt with. No, Dean just liked to be able to take care of himself and his family just in case the worst came to pass.

And now those plans and supplies and fantasies about living a life off the grid under a social collapse were crawling through his brain. The disastrous volcanic eruption, the earthquakes and tsunamis, the global conflict all around, all of that caused a sense of anxiety and hyper vigilance that had him on edge. Working with school children every day, he put on a brave face when they expressed their concerns and fears, but even some of them had stopped coming to school- no doubt pulled out by their parents in fear of the worst. Now he was wondering how long he should wait, how far he should let things go before he took extreme measures himself and began to implement the plan he and his friends had talked about just in case of an situation like the one going on around them. Ammunition had flown off the shelves, and people had pulled up to Wal-Mart to buy pallets of bottled water just a few days ago. Canned food was being horded, and some people were even beginning to build large fences, installing concrete support structures in their yard (homeowners' associations be damned) to stave off looters and rioters in the case of a civil revolt.

Gripping the steering wheel of his Toyota Tacoma and gritting his teeth, Dean felt his heart rate start to raise. He had told himself years ago to not let being stuck in traffic bother him- no one was going to lob a grenade at his vehicle or set off an IED on Interstate-80, but now, the scenes from movies like World War Z, with six-lane highways turned into parking lots as panicked civilians abandoned their vehicles to escape their fears on foot began to creep into his mind.

How much longer would it be until things got that bad here? They had already mobilized the National Guard in several states out West. How long until his unit was called up to support them? He had been there to assist with hurricane relief several years ago, and his CERFP unit had been put on alert during several major disasters, but every time before he had gone knowing that things at home were stable and secure. This time, he didn't think he could leave his family if they called him up. It seemed like it was just a matter of time before the social structure around them crumbled and people devolved once again into tribal systems, fighting each other for survival in a panic to protect themselves from uncertain doom headed their way.

Flipping open his phone, he looked down and selected the number of his now-ex-wife. They weren't together anymore, but they still cared about each other, and their children were the brightest lights in their world. He worried that if something happened in the coming days, they wouldn't be able to get to each other.

"What would you say about you and kids staying at my place for a few nights? Just until everything going on settles down. I don't like the neighborhood you live in, not with the way things are right now."
© 2007-2024
BBCode Cheatsheet