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Government Contracting School

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5 contributions to Government Contracting School
How I Deal With Failure and Rejection
I used to pride myself on being one of those people who had never failed at anything. Flawless flight training record, every marathon I ran was faster than the last, and my business made more money every year compared to the last. It felt good, and I walked around with a certain boisterous swagger. Then I fucked up and made a dumb decision to land on the edge of a sketchy weather system and had to resign from my first ever flying job, took a gamble to work with a marketing company to grow the business and the youtube channel and I lost $40k, and to top it all off, I flew my employees to the other side of the world to run a marathon with me and I ran my 2nd slowest marathon to date, only after running the most mileage and becoming the fittest I’d ever been. All within 6 months of each other. So yeah, it was pretty shitty from the outside looking in, and I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t embarrassed, ashamed, and for the first time in my 23 years of life: genuinely, just unsure of what my next move was. Financially, I was still recovering. Flying-wise wise I was way behind on the number of hours I should’ve had by then. Fitness-wise? Forget it, I damn near almost quit running for the 2nd time in 12 months. However, it dawned on me when my editor was explaining to his girlfriend why he was in Australia and what crazy son of a gun convinced him to go out there. She had a “what the fuck” moment when she realized that all of the exploits he was describing were done by the same young, dumb, 23-year-old kid. It was in that moment, I realized I had encountered so much failure at this point in my life because it was the first time I was pursuing things that scared me and were not a guarantee. I couldn’t go to bed at night knowing that I’d achieve all my goals for the year, and that was a good thing. See, failure is a barometer of success. If you only ever did things you know you’d be good at, you’d be in the same spot year over year, decade after decade, and your last name would carry no more and no less weight than what it currently does sitting on the edge of your driver's license. It’s the man in the arena, you have to dare to do the things people will only ever spectate, and if you fail at them, understand that you have done something worth doing and you can find solace in knowing that you have truly indulged in the human experience.
0 likes • 21d
Thank You failure and rejections leaves us all with a story. I’m finding with your videos it’s always how you start to get to your ultimate goals in being awarded. You shared don’t give up!!!
My honest thoughts on the government shutdown
You’ve been reading about it, watching it on the news, probably been hearing your peers talk about it: the government shutdown. Here’s why it’s not a factor (if you do business with DLA) 1. Prior‐year or multi‐year funding already obligated If a contract is already awarded and funded (or fully obligated) before the lapse in appropriations, it may continue. For example: “A contractor performing under a contract (or contract option) that was awarded prior to the expiration of appropriations may continue to provide contract services … up to the limit of the funds obligated on the contract prior to the lapse in appropriations.” This means if DLA or the parent department had appropriated funds prior to the shutdown and placed them on contract, performance and execution may continue even if Congress hasn’t passed the new annual appropriation. 2. Essential / excepted activities Under the Antideficiency Act and related guidance, agencies may continue activities that are expressly authorized by statute, or that are “necessary to the discharge of the President’s constitutional duties,” or involve protecting human life or property. In the defense/logistics context, this can include critical supply chains, readiness, logistics for military operations, etc. The DOD guidance lists contracting, contract administration, logistics operations in support of excepted activities as potentially continuing. 3. Contract awards made just before or during lapse under particular authorities Some contract activity may be allowed if funded from prior year or “no-year” funds, or under statutory exceptions (for example, the Feed and Forage Act). If you examine solicitations / contracts you can see the funding year in the middle of the number for instance SPE4A6-25-T-Q086. Why You Might Still Win Today Even during a shutdown, DLA may still issue or complete certain awards because: Funds from prior appropriations are available (multi-year or “no-year” funds);
1 like • Oct 30
Thank you.
Government Shutdown
Well guess who’s not shutdown DLA keep submitting!!! I got some communication from POC possible award
YouTube Videos
Day and Sam thank you for your last 2 YouTube videos that’s getting me closer to understand processing and clarifying RFQ looking forward to your Friday video.
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Mentorship
Good day excited to join this community and follow instructions on being awarded!!
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Bridgett Townsend
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9points to level up
@bridgett-townsend-8882
Bridgett Townsend Emerging Government Contractor | Business Development Strategist | World Changer

Active 4d ago
Joined Sep 29, 2025
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