Thursday, May 31, 2007
Deja vu
Wednesday, May 30, 2007
Where do they get guys like this
Afterwards, I asked where he was from. "Oklahoma, sir." "Where in Oklahoma?" "Do you know where Tulsa is,sir?" "Yeah, I grew up there." "I'm from Claremore, sir." So that is the answer to where does America get clear eyed kids who will do "work most Americans won't do" for less than minimum wage. Andrew from Claremore was just one more of those guys out here doing his job and making us proud. He's going to the big hospital to get his tendon sewn back together tonight, but even here I forget that there are a ton of Andrews out there doing the right thing (he didn't shoot the guy he was setting up for today because he wasn't 100% sure he was a bad guy) when they could very easily do anything else. Keep them in your prayers tonight.
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
Dirty Hands
As I said, I do not like this arrangement, so when I found out that they may reduce the EWO staffing at my BN from 2 to 1 (as it should be) I decided I needed to go do more of the hands on stuff just so that I won't be caught unprepared when it (hopefully) happens. Today I turned wrenches and carried boxes, and had a delightful time doing things that Navy officers don't normally do. The hands on part is easy - I feel that I could do it on my own after one day - but it is also fun to be able to see what you've done at the end of the day. Hopefully I'll get to do more.
Monday, May 28, 2007
A relief to the mind
Most captains toe the line as expected and are good soldiers. Most are appropriately difficult for everyone to live with. I have found out, however, that it is not the captains that are bad, but the influence of those above them. How do I know this? Today I observed two captains completely free of the corrupting influence of authority. You see, we have several military transition teams on base, which consist of a captain and a couple of non-commissioned officers that go out and train the Iraqis. So the captains are king. It is hard to tell who these free-radical captians are, since we all dress the same, except in one particular case: Marines. Marines dress differently from everyone else on base so you can identify them from a mile.
Stereotypically, Marines of all rank are stretched tight. I thought it was inherent in their Marineliness. All spit and polish and short hair. Jackbooted thugs a reporter once called them quite incorrectly, but their reputation for near Prussian discipline is renowned. I saw a corpsman, the Navy's emissary of medical mercy to the Marines, the other day, and he had some pretty long hair. Flowing locks is a fair description. Looked like there might have been a touch of peroxide in there, too. "No biggie, he's just being typically Navy and flaunting our less stringent hair standards while being stuck with the uptight Marines," I thought. (The Navy, of all services, has the reputation of being least military, lovably pudgy, and hair a bit on the shaggy side. It is a mark of our free thinking and high IQ.) But tonight I saw the two Marine captains he obviously worked for eating in the DFAC. And, yes, their hair was well within regs. Navy regs. For women. (Okay, not quite that bad. They were still in regs, I'm sure, but their hair was quite a bit longer than mine.) I have never seen Marines (non-aviators) look so relaxed, like the members of Department of the Navy they really are. One of them even had a mustache that looked like the tail from some woodland marsupial.
Then it hit me. These are O-3's, just like me, not Marines. The reason they would be chest-thumping manly-men in their normal environment is because there are majors and Lt Colonels around. It is the oak leaf that makes man evil, not grunting huahs an ooh-rah's. Left to their own devices, these cammie wearing captains long for freedom and rebel ever so slightly against "The Man" just like every junior officer in the Navy. They are just afraid to show it on their own, but it is true. Welcome to the dark side, fellow O-3's. Have the courage of long hair that your Navy brethren have had for ages.
Now not everyone past the rank of O-4 is beyond redemption. In fact, if you are reading this blog as anything higher than an O-4, I'm positive that you are not easily offended by keen or cutting insights on human nature as are the evil O-5's. And if you work in the Math Dept at USNA or will ever be my boss, that is another sign of not having fallen prey to the typical perils of the O-4/5 community. But there is something about O-3 that is the last rank where, when left alone, you can be free from the perils group-think and the dangers of conformity. Even as a Marine.
BTW, I have received books from several people. They all look fascinating, and I really appreciate the thought and good choices made by all.
Sunday, May 27, 2007
One post for the whole weekend
Other big events of the day: I got a new battery for the smoke detector in my room. It died about 10 days ago so I put the battery in my pocket as a reminder. I changed it from pocket to pocket about three times when I changed pants, so it wasn't the most effective of reminders in retrospect. Also finished reading "History of the English Speaking Peoples." I'm glad I got the abridged version because even though Churchill is a great writer I'm not the best reader and was starting to lose steam.
The "stop your pity party" thought of the day is I have two legs. One of our soldiers lost his on Saturday, but it looks like they saved his arm and there is a good chance that he will keep vision in at least one eye. So in spite of all the reasons I could find to complain, and trust me I'm the best at finding them, I'll pass tonight. Don't forget to pray for these guys out here, and also don't forget the ones who get to go home early.
Friday, May 25, 2007
6 Years Ago Today
Those six years have been very good though when you forget the less than very good parts. On May 25, 2001, I didn't have a beautiful, loving wife or the two cutest daughters on earth. I hadn't known the joy of living in Hawaii, the most beautiful place on earth. I didn't know the joy of checking off of the submarine after three years and going to take one of the best jobs around, teaching at USNA. I also didn't know how good I had it living in America as opposed to Iraq. So they have been a good six years. Even though there are large chunks of them I would gladly trade, I wouldn't trade the whole of them for the world.
Thursday, May 24, 2007
Dining out
We also had Major General Simmons, General Odiearno's deputy, visit today. Standard general schtick, including telling us his briefing was going to be at 1345 and it starting at 1435. But he's a general so he can keep us all sitting in a room waiting. He talked. Blah, blah, blah. And must be more interesting listening to yourself talk as a general than listening to a general talk. My only conclusion is that generals and admirals are the same.
30 Days
Wednesday, May 23, 2007
Another interservice first
Leave here is a very complex, but desirable, beast. There are several dates of importance. The first is the day you leave your FOB. I imagine that will be a few days before the next important day, the day I fly out of Baghdad. That will be June 23 which is one month from today. But Baghdad international is only international on the scale that Tulsa International is: one country foreign country only. I will arrive in Kuwait, Lord willing, on the 23 and then fly out... later. There are horror stories of being stuck in Kuwait up to five days, but that is not common. I get home and will have 14 days starting the first day for which I am home before noon. So if I get a flight that comes in at 12:01, I get a whole extra day more than if I got in at 11:59.
So there are several days that matter, and I know one of them. I have to fill out forms for services to which I do not belong. But I am still smiling because I am one month away from a day that will mean I only have one more unknown quantity of days before I get to see my girls :)
Tuesday, May 22, 2007
Oriental Mixed Veggies
Monday, May 21, 2007
Today Victory in Baghdad!
This is Lars' website for those of you who want to spin and twist with Lars for yourselves:
http://lar5.com/cube/index.html
Sunday, May 20, 2007
Fun at meetings
In the military, we call our meetings briefs, but they are just as mind numbingly boring as I imagine the civilian type are. Yesterday, we had our weekly BUB, or battalion update brief, which is the longest meeting of the week. On a good week, I contribute 2 minutes out of the 2+ hours, and on a bad week I contribute 5. Another sign of a good BUB for Matthew is no tasking generated, especially since any tasking generated from 2-5 minutes of input is not usually well thought out tasking and is not worth spending my time on.
I have digressed. One less painful part of the BUB is when the Combat Stress Doctor says his little piece. Usually it is just a gentle reminder to the company commanders and first sergeants not to beat their troops. This week it was on the dangers of sleep deprivation, from which I am not suffering. He had a spiel on the dangers of not getting a full nights sleep, one of which was poor decision making and another of which was being emotionally unstable and mean. There was a moment of awkwardness when the Battalion Commander must have felt all eyes on him because he is often very direct and, in his defense, he gets very little sleep. He blurts out, "So you're saying I'd make better decisions if I got more sleep?" Now I feel for the good Dr. since he probably meant for commanders to convert this message to more sleep for the troops, but that is not how the BC took it. The people who answer more directly to the BC (especially the XO) had telepathically gotten a garbled message across to the BC, but meant to pass on that more sleep might make certain conversations more pleasant and less mean. The good doctor recovered nicely with a, "Why don't we give it a try and see how it works," which was the diplomacy you would expect from someone who deals all day with people from generation X crazed from combat.
Saturday, May 19, 2007
Precious?
Today for the first time in my expansive military career I saw a husband and wife reenlist together in a war zone. He was in a unit on the FOB, and she is in one of our more remote companies. As reenlistment is a big deal, the Army or Navy will often go out of their way to reenlist you where you want so that you get a nice photo out of it. I've seen people do it in Babylon or on the bridge of the sub or even hanging from a helicopter. So the Army let this soldier (I almost said "gal", but that would have hinted at sexist tendencies in a way "guy" wouldn't have. Go figure. And those aren't scare quotes. But that's two sentences that start with conjunctions.) catch a flight up here to reenlist with her husband. They have both been deployed for eight months, and because of something or the other, they could not even take their mid-deployment leave together so this was the first time they had seen each other since October. They also have a year-old son who is living with the grandparents.
I want to respect their patriotism, and I do think there is a level of ephemeral cuteness about the whole thing. On the other hand, "You may kiss your bride," (once again, legitimate quotation marks) even said any other way is an odd way to end a military ceremony in a war zone. The only thing that would have made this family war zone moment more complete and modern would have been if their son could have flown out to join them.
Friday, May 18, 2007
Notebooks
Here’s my sympathy line for the night: the scallops were a bit tough. What? Can’t use sympathy and scallops in the same sentence unless it involves gastro-intestinal rebellion? What is this war coming to?
Yesterday I saw something that had an effect between making me wretch and sending me into apoplectic shock. I went to talk with the LCDR EWO on the FOB, and he showed me his EWO notebook. I almost gag just thinking about it. Notebooks represent everything unwholesome and evil about the Navy. Every “program” has a notebook, and the health of a program can be measured by the status of the notebook. Back on the boat I had two very important programs, so I had weekly reviews with the captain for each of the notebooks. These reviews involved him initialing each blank that he had to verify review. Then, he would circle things in his purple pen. Sometimes he circled things that were overlooked or could be better, but sometimes he would make notes because when the captain makes corrections, it shows that he is involved in the program. Also, it didn’t matter what actually happened as long as the appropriate section of the notebook was filled out. For the training section of your notebook, you could have given the worst training in the world, but as long as the training worksheet had all of the I’s dotted and T’s crossed, training was effective. On the other hand, if one of your smart junior guys gave training on an area he was truly the expert on, you would get a purple circle because junior guys giving training is in and of itself a deficiency that needs correcting. No amount of explaining could make it better.
So I saw this notebook, and I was so proud of myself for not using the pistol the Army makes me carry everywhere. He had it all arranged perfectly with colored dividers and page protectors. In it he had a training program with lesson outlines check-in rosters. He had a qualification card so that people could “qualify” to become “experts” on this one stinkin’ lousy piece of gear we run. He even had award certificates for people who did qualify – “a little morale booster.” I know he meant well, but while my system IS important, it is a box that people flip a switch on before they ever go outside. It is easier to use than a radio, but they don’t have qual cards for radios. And training – let the guys rest when they come back from a day in the desert summer. If they have to do any training, let their platoon sergeants and squad leaders pick a subject that is important instead of some officer who is marooned out here making up a topic that will fill his notebook. That’s quickly becoming one of the big problems with this war. You have a bunch of people out here who want to justify their tax free status and "break out" from the other officers on the staff for the next promotion, so they make up stupid things to do. And make notebooks to track them. I think I’m going to be sick!
Wednesday, May 16, 2007
A cold rainy day
It's barbecue night, and it is very hard to type while eating, so I'm signing off. I think I'll play a little Daniel Ho and go to bed. Aloha!
A cold rainy day
It's barbecue night, and it is very hard to type while eating, so I'm signing off. I think I'll play a little Daniel Ho and go to bed. Aloha!
Tuesday, May 15, 2007
Getting old
Monday, May 14, 2007
Sometimes I wish
Someone in his unit had the fine idea of assigning to him one of the truly meaningless but time consuming reports that the military thrives on, and emailed him the tasking and required document. Then they asked where it was a couple of weeks later. As one of the doctors said, "I don't think he even checks his email," (Mental note: that strategy might work.), to which he heartily agreed in a lacksadasical way. Then he said, "Oh, do they still want me to do that? They should have asked someone else if they wanted it done right." I don't think I have the follow through to really mean a line like that, but living in a bureaucratic morass that is not just the Navy, but the Narmy, I am tonight jealous of the moral courage and intestinal fortitude it takes to just not care.
Saturday, May 12, 2007
Futility or hope?
Friday, May 11, 2007
Something new
The bathroom is surprisingly ornate for a men's room with brass (painted plastic) hooks on the wall and tile instead of cement. I think it is a carryover from the days when the base was a headquarters for the Republican Guard. But amidst the glitter and sparkle, what stood out today was the new shower curtain. It is a lovely royal blue with dolphins. Dolphins! In the desert! Makes me feel like I'm right back at sea! Makes me want to use gratuitous exclamation points!
When I first arrived I thought the pastel flowers on a pale yellow background was different for a men's shower facility, but the Army was still new to me. At that time, they had one dolphin shower curtain, a pink one, which I was sure had to be someone's bad joke once they found out a submariner was coming. Afterall, the Los Angeles logo was affectionately known among the crew as "the four gay dolphins" for reasons I could never understand. Nevertheless, it warmed my heart to know that they cared enough to have a welcome to the unit joke waiting for me. I always respect a little inter-service or inter-community ribbing. With the addition of the second dolphin curtain, I know that the pink dolphin shower curtain was not the Army's way of reaching out to me, but is apparently part of the Army interior design ethos as reflected in the choices of their supply system.
Thursday, May 10, 2007
Rubik's Cube
Wednesday, May 9, 2007
Not your grand-daddy's Army
night is one huge indication that technology has completely changed what it means to deploy. Another indication that Army life has changed is that huddled in the comms office were about five guys from the communications office. They had gotten a projector and hooked it up to their personal (I'm assuming) computers and were all playing World of Warcraft, an internet computer game, together. Comms guys are the smartest and consequently the nerdiest soldiers I know of, but still group video gaming isn't how I picture the troops passing their time after storming Normandy.
I'm not going to knock it though - they are the guys who set up my call home every night.
Tuesday, May 8, 2007
The boss speaks
Monday, May 7, 2007
Ominous Signs
I've been meaning to write about laundry for some time now because dropping off my laundry is one of those little pastimes that fills my day that has not yet traveled the information super-highway. The same KBR that runs the DFAC runs the laundry, so it is one of the smoother operations on base. By the letter of the law you are only allowed to turn in 20 items at a time (a pair of socks counts as a single item), but the Albanian and Macedonian guys who run the joint are generally pretty lenient and will let you turn in a few extra if you waive the optional inventory that many people do while dropping off laundry but no one does while picking up. Even though the laundry area is the most fly dense place besides the port-a-johns, the laundry guys are usually pretty cheerful and have taught me how to say hello and thank you in Macedonian (merditha and falmanderit). I guess I am the only one who has asked where they are from and talk to them while turning my laundry in, because now they laugh and say merditha before I walk up. Little do they know that the only reason I ask where they are from is so that I can better stereotype them and put them in a box based on incomplete knowledge and prejudice (not really - just wondered where they were from), but it has taught me a couple of new words.
Saturday, May 5, 2007
From James to James
I'll tell you how it happens. Whenever any new person is added to a government staff, they become indispensable. We have two EWO's doing my job, me and a chief. When the chief that just left was getting ready to leave I told my boss that I could handle the job just fine by myself and we didn't need anyone else. In fact, I told him I would stay busier and the time would go faster if it was only me. He said that he would still like to have two people on staff so he sent out a replacement. When the next battalion comes in, mind you, they will only have one person with to do the job that two of us are now doing. Unless they are legally dead, they'll be just fine.
No boss wants to let their staff shrink, and people who arrive at a new job as extras have to find (make) something to do to justify themselves. We got a new captain on the battalion staff to fill a position that had never existed before. She is one of those people pleaser types who will make up stuff to do or spend time making perfectly good things look prettier or different, and then have the audacity to think she has accomplished something. Make a meaningless change and think you have had an effect? Ridiculous. The Army, the Navy, the whole military has the mindless notion that all motion is progress, all change is improvement, and all effort causes success. When did good enough stop being good enough? My program is running just peachy-keen fine, and I'll be a monkey's uncle if I'm going to put in effort for effort's sake just to make my spreadsheets more colorful and my training presentations have multimedia effects. There. I've said it. I'm a rebel. A type-A minimalist. I will not make up work to make myself look busy. I will sit and read about dead kings.
Friday, May 4, 2007
Summer's here
Even with the smell, it could be alot worse. Tonight there are two lobsters hobbling around in lobster wheel chairs because I ate their tails. And some old cow (or other animal) is missing a piece of muscle that was obviously well used. (The steak is not quite up to Chez Rusty standards.) So life is fine, and tomorrow is another Rusty day.
BTW, thanks for all of the emails. I have gotten quite a few lately and have fallen behind in answering them. Sorry.
Thursday, May 3, 2007
Anniversary
So here I am. Wonder what May 3, 2008, will hold.
Wednesday, May 2, 2007
The middle is here
Tonight was the first night KBR really let me down. It, being Wednesday, should by right of natural law be barbecue night, but they had some Chinese dish on the main line. Probably should have saved the hotdog option for tonight, but bygones are bygones. I'm still not starving though - had a chicken sandwich and chicken wings - and even though the routine is broken I can't complain because the food is hot and more than I need.