Severest & Flight
We should talk about how to run a mission when the weather is suddenly bad—keeping the squad on point while still letting someone take a creative shortcut.
If the weather hits a curveball, keep the squad tight with a quick pulse check—make sure everyone knows the fallback plan before you even hit the turbulence. Then, hand the creative guy a clear goal: “You’re on my left, keep it low, but you can dip past that ridge if it clears the cloud bank.” Trust his instincts, but set a hard line on where the line crosses the no‑fly zone. That way you stay disciplined and you’re still giving that edge of improvisation that keeps the mission on the edge of the unknown.
That’s the approach. Keep the line tight, set limits, and let the creative hand the mission a razor‑edge advantage without breaking the chain.
Sounds like a solid playbook. Tight line, clear boundaries, and that one creative spark—yeah, that’s how you keep the squad humming and the mission razor‑sharp. Keep it moving.
Solid. Keep the cadence, enforce the line, and let that spark operate strictly within the bounds we set. That's how we stay sharp.