Robins honors fallen Georgia Airman
By Faye Banks-Anderson, 78th Air Base Wing Public Affairs
/ Published October 08, 2010
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Robins Honor Guard members carry the casket of Senior Airman Michael Buras to an awaiting hearse on the Robins flightline Saturday. U. S. Air Force photo by Gary Cutrell
ROBINS AIR FORCE BASE, Ga. --
Everything was put into perspective for me Saturday when the flag-draped coffin of Senior Airman Michael Buras was removed from an aircraft on the Robins flightline.
It was the first time I had witnessed a dignified transfer of a fallen military member.
Buras, 23, of Fitzgerald, Ga., died Sept. 21 of wounds suffered during an IED detonation in Kandahar, Afghanistan.
What I saw made me realize all the problems I thought were important are really not that significant. Seeing the coffin of this warrior who gave his life for our country, his grieving family, and the Robins Honor Guard, made me realize it's time to stop complaining, stop feeling bad when my job isn't all I think it should be, and stop blaming everyone else when things don't go the way I think they should.
But what the ceremony did most was remind me the importance of my job, which is to support the warfighter.
Whether you're civilian, or contractor, officer or enlisted Airman, or management or employee, know your job also supports those in harm's way and is important.
It's not often we have such poignant reminders of the battles in which our country is engaged.
It's not every day our sacrifices, no matter how many and no matter how big or small, are justly put in to perspective.
But, every day, the sacrifices of Senior Airman Buras and the other brave Americans who made the ultimate sacrifice, should never be far from our thoughts.