Adaptability ... Key For Sailor
by U.S. Marine Corps Cpl. Isaac Orozco
December 31, 2022
“Life’s all about finding a meaning in the
job you do, the work you do, the hobbies you do. If you’re not
trying to find a meaning then I would ask ... Why are you doing what
you are doing?” This is what U.S. Navy Petty Officer Third Class
Christian Sucik said to himself during a tumultuous time in his life
as a teenager.
“Life’s all about finding a meaning in the
job you do, the work you do, the hobbies you do. If you’re not
trying to find a meaning then I would ask ... Why are you doing what
you are doing?” This is what U.S. Navy Petty Officer Third Class
Christian Sucik said to himself during a tumultuous time in his life
as a teenager.
At this point in his childhood, he was a
drifter with a mischievous mindset. Despite this, Sucik was a boy
with big ambitions and something to prove, both are things he
carried into his adulthood and career.
Now, instead of dreaming
about his ambitions, Sucik is making them a reality by balancing his
job at MCAS Iwakuni’s harbor as a Engineman, and a music career
which he hopes he can inspire people just like how he was once
influenced.
 December 19, 2022 - U.S. Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class Christian Sucik, an Engineman with Headquarters and Headquarters Squadron (H&HS), Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni,
on a U.S. Navy utility boat at MCAS Iwakuni, Japan. Sucik joined the Navy in 2020 and has since become H&HS, MCAS Iwakuni, Blue Jacket of the Year in 2022.
He also is a part-time musician (top right), who provides his music at different venues and streaming services. (Image
created by USA Patriotism! from U.S. Marine Corps photos by Cpl. Isaac Orozco.)
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Sucik, a native of Las Vegas, Nevada, has had
some aspects of his life set against him from the very beginning.
Growing up, his parents worked in off-track betting in which they
would have a wide range of people calling in to bet on horses and
his parents would assist them by punching tickets for the customers
or cashing in for clients who had won. It was because of this
however, they would have to move multiple times because of some
unfortunate incidents with a few of their clients.
“My
childhood was a little different because we would move 12-13 times
because of mix-ups with the IRS,” Sucik said. “Sometimes the people
my parents were working for wouldn't pay their taxes or maybe the
players themselves were not paying their taxes and as you would
imagine that caused a lot of complications down the road for us.”
Sucik would move from state to state and school to school
across the country. Each time he would have to find a new group of
friends. This caused him to feel isolated and alone, but at the same
time, this hardship shaped him to become more adaptable to new
situations as an adult.
“Every 6 months or year I would have
to pick up, move and find a whole new group of friends,” Sucik said.
“I got used to it eventually but that also taught me some very
important lessons as a kid such as how to adapt quickly and not
dwell on the past because there was really no time to.”
As
he grew older and made his way into different high schools, Sucik
was causing trouble as he surrounded himself with a few bad
influences. He recalls a certain stunt he pulled at this time period
which caused his life to change forever.
“I really was
hanging out with the wrong crowd in high school and we were in a
store and we, being teenage boys, just said amongst ourselves ‘let's
just take some stuff, nobody would know’,” Sucik said. “There I was
with my bright yellow Pittsburgh Pirates hat taking some candy bars
and thinking I was the baddest man around. I passed them all out to
the other students and sure enough, two class periods later the
principal calls my class and says ‘Can the kid in the bright yellow
Pittsburgh Pirate hat please come down to the office?’”
When
Sucik made his way down to the principal's office he came face to
face with his mother and the school principal and knew from that
moment he was in more trouble than he had ever been in before.
After a very long talk with his parents, they decided to have
him move with his grandmother in Missouri to finish high school and
instill discipline within Sucik. This was the turning point in
Sucik’s life.
“It was a blessing in disguise.” Said Sucik.
“My grandma was and still is my greatest tutor. She reiterated the
same things to me my parents did about growing up and succeeding
constantly. I really didn't want to be the guy to let my entire
family down or even be homeless that young. I decided from that day
forward that it's time to grow up.”
Sucik then decided to
join the U.S. Navy in November of 2020 and challenged himself to be
a better person than he previously was. After his initial training
had finished he found himself at Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni’s
harbor, working as an engineman. His daily duties include operating,
servicing, and repairing Navy ships and small crafts.
Sucik
found it easy to adapt to his new work and environment, although he
says sometimes he does not feel like the typical engineman in the
Navy.
“Engineman are typically gruff, tough and no-nonsense
if a job is on the table,” Sucik said. “However they are also very
honest, hardworking, and very willing to teach and give information
where it's due. Although I'm personally very new to it, I feel I am
able to adapt very quickly and strive under the initial pressure for
success and do what I got to do.”
His passion for his work
is noticed by his superiors, U.S. Navy Petty Officer 1st Class
Martin Ramos, Senior Engineman at MCAS Iwakuni’s Harbor, gave
insight about Sucik’s work ethic as an Engineman.
“He’s a
great sailor and one I would want to keep in,” said Ramos about
Sucik. “When it comes to learning he’s really a stud and he finds it
really easy to adapt and learn new things. He’s very humble and
respectful when explaining things and honestly, he’s one of my go-to
guys when I need the job to get done.”
Sucik has since gone
on to win H&HS, MCAS Iwakuni, Blue Jacket of the Year in 2022 and
continues to provide those under him assistance and advice whenever
he is needed.
Although Sucik’s entire work ethos and
personality has changed since he was young, he still holds onto a
passion he’s had since he was in school. When he’s off work he
devotes his free time as a part-time musician which he says he got
his inspiration from a fellow classmate.
“In some schools I
was an outcast. I didn't have a lot of friends and I wasn’t very
popular due to moving all the time,” Sucik said, “However, I
remember I was at a pep rally in freshman year and a girl went up on
stage and just rapped. Everybody that was sitting down just rushed
to the stage. I was just in awe, it was a crazy experience.”
After seeing someone else his age take a chance, he decided to
take an opportunity for himself and talk to the principal of the
school about performing for the next school pep rally.
“I
went to the principal and said ‘Do you think I can perform anytime
soon?' and he said yes but with a few conditions,” Sucik said. “He
said ‘No cussing during the song and just make sure its school
appropriate.’ I went to work and made a song called ‘Hey Seneca
High’ and from there I just stuck with it.”
Sucik says that
music for him was something that helped him balance his emotions as
a teenager, and something that was influential to him growing up.
“I use music as an outlet to talk about my feelings or to
get rid of stressors and it has played a huge part in helping me in
my later teens.” Sucik said. “It helps me so much with anger,
sadness, grief and building my confidence. Now that I'm an adult,
it's really second nature and even as an old man I want to be
involved in it even if it's as small as keeping up with new
artists.”
Sucik still keeps his passion well and healthy
today by putting out music under his artist name as “Kidgod” and
performing at different venues even while being stationed at MCAS
Iwakuni.
With more self-confidence and experience doing what
he loves, he wants to keep pursuing a perfect balance between being
a model sailor and being the successful artist he strives to be.
“If I'm still in the Navy five years from now I hope to find a
balance between both sides of myself,” said Sucik. “Even if I am on
a ship I'll still find time to do it. If I'm not in the Navy then
I'm going to have a setup to make music every day and send it to
producers to get it mixed. Then hopefully I'll build a repertoire in
any city I'm in and just go from there.”
With the balance
between the two careers he has set up for himself stable and his
ambition materializing into reality, Sucik hopes to inspire those
who were like him at one point with both his work ethic and music.
“For someone in my similar situation I would say to them
give yourself an outlet and stick with it." Sucik said. “Don't doubt
yourself, the hardest part about pursuing your passion is having
self-confidence which everyone struggles with. As long as you can
find it in yourself to know your value and put forth an effort into
something that you think you would really be good at, you'll
succeed.”
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