Sunday, March 12, 2006

My day off...

Greetings and Salutations… This will be kind of short but I wanted to give you a run down of what happens on an off day around here. I think this will be easiest to do a timeline. So I was going to do a timeline, but upon further evaluation- I don’t want to put that much info out there, so I will just play 1, 2, 3…

1- Wake up, brush teeth, read a little Hemingway

2- Make sure my driver is up and is on his way to maintenance to get the mechanics to give the truck a once over

3- On my way to the gym to workout

4- Back from the gym, check email and see if anything has come down the chute for us to do

5- The three S’s: Shower, Shave, S….

6- On my was to lunch

7- Back from lunch hanging out watching the guys play video games

8- On our way to the pool, yes that is right we went swimming today. Now my section had done this once before but I hadn’t been around because I was at the airport with my truck. Granted the Middle East is slightly warmer than Texas or Indiana the pool was still freezing. We dove in goofed around for a little while, then got out to play some games. In addition to three pools they have ping pong, pool and foosball tables. So there we were in the middle of a combat zone playing pool, goofing off just being kids- truly having a good time and forgetting where we were. Of course as fate would have it just as we were getting ready to leave two Apaches fly about 70 feet over the pool, instantly snapping us back to reality.

9- At the P/X to do some shopping and grab a bite to eat. This of course turns into a two and a half hour B/S session where we just sat, ate and talked about everything that came to our heads.

10- Back in the room checking my email and talking about the next days missions

11- Typing this getting ready to read a little and then go to bed

So… I guess now you have some idea what we do with our free time when we get it, it isn’t that bad here- really. It was really fortunate that I got this time to relax (I know this sounds terrible) because the couple of days that I have been back here have been terrible. At times this place can drain the life out of you faster than you can possibly imagine. I am recharged and ready to play the game for a few more days- though I must admit I can’t wait to go back and have another day where I forget where I am.

I leave you today with a picture of the pool and a picture of a sign for an event that I really hope occurs again in ’06.

Peace and Love- Roadshow 6

P.S. this was posted a day late, because the net was down last night and secondly I really hate the format but I really can’t put the timeline out there like I would like to.

Thursday, March 09, 2006

Rooster Tails and Paper Dolls...

So it has been a very long time since I have had anything of value to say on here, I have been very busy- jihad, boom-boom classes and trips the airport have consumed more of my time than I would like to admit.

I have just finished watching the movie Madison, talk about a really good movie. The funniest thing is that I picked it up at the P/X at a camp here in town where I was taking my boom-boom class. Who would’ve thought that while touring Iraq, I would bump into a movie that I always wanted to see as I was killing time in the cool Middle Eastern spring evening? For those of you who don’t know (there probably aren’t many of you) Madison is the town in southern Indiana located right down the Ohio River from my beloved Alma Mater HC. The movie is the story of the 1971 Gold Cup Race, which is the hydroplane championship- this is the sport’s World Series. The Madison Regatta has been held every year since like 1904. I never attended the race while in College- though thanks to the Ulster Project and the Sloan family I got the chance to see the race the summer after I graduated. I really hope to be able to attend the race again when my time in the service is over.

Sitting in my room, in a mausoleum, here in Baghdad watching that movie brought a whole lot of memories flooding back. Seeing all of the places that I passed for four years and then fell in love with during the summer of ’03, brought back so many good memories. The movie showed so the spirit of that river town that made me fall in love with it that summer, Madison really is a special town and I count myself very fortunate to have had the chance to live there for a few short months and have my entire outlook concerning that sleepy town changed. As an HC student I don’t think you ever fully appreciate that wonderful little bubble that you live in until you are sitting so very far away from it. I was given a golden opportunity to stick around for just a little longer than most and I have never made a better decision in my whole life. The friends that I made over those few short months are of a caliber rarely seen in the real world. The truly amazing part of all of this is that I remembered all of this from where I am currently located, each day here it is a struggle to keep my head up and my eyes on the horizon it would be so very simple just to lie down and succumb to the despair.

So in short if you have any love of HC (you will see a lot of old memories) or the town of Madison itself, you have probably all ready seen the film, if not find it and watch it. It really brought a little bit of home right into my room, as well as a flood of memories that brightened my day for just a few short moments and of course led to you getting a few legitimate paragraphs out of my monkey butt.

This past week I took a little mini-holiday here in Iraq- no patrols, no command decisions and no Iraq (for all intensive purposes). I went down south to the camp where the main body of my unit stays to take a boom-boom class. There are very few things that a United States soldier cannot defeat, that being said the one thing that is killing more people here than any other is the boom-boom. Explosives are tough to combat and probably account for the vast majority of fear filled moments. When someone is shooting at you, you can locate that person at shoot back- when something goes boom, you feel very helpless and you have a limited list of responses to choose from. So the question becomes how do you combat the things that you can’t see or shoot? That is exactly what I spent the last few days learning; now I have many techniques and insights to take back to my troops that I did not have before. The instructors of this class were made up of Soldiers, Sailors, Brits and Aussies- a more dedicated group of instructors I have never encountered in a military setting. The class of course required a certain level of trust (read as security clearance) - so one frustrating part is that there are things that I learned that I cannot directly teach my guys. I also made the mistake of using my catchall notebook for the class, because now it has to be kept secure and I need a new everyday notebook. I really hope that I can impart in my troops at least half of the things that I learned if I can do that I will save lives.

It was nice to spend a few days away from my unit, I didn’t have to worry about going out of the wire to fight and where we were was a larger camp and had some amenities that we don’t have here. It has the military’s version of Starbucks- so I was able to relax with a latte and read some Hemingway or talk with friends of mine. The entire time that I was there I carried a little laminated paper man named Flat Stanley in my pocket- this will transition into my next homesick memory of the week. My little cousin Breanna, who is absolutely adorable and whom I miss dearly, sent this little man to me as part of a school project. They read a book about Stanley, then made their own little Stanleys’ and sent them to relatives all over the place. The charge to the receiver of Stanley is to take him around with you for a week or so and take some pictures of you and Stanley going about your day. My Stanley so far has been on combat patrols, raids and set in on meetings that a lot of the guys I work with couldn’t get into.

So there I was a few nights ago sitting inside my room at this other camp and going over some material from class when I felt a crunch against my thigh- it was Stanley. I of course took him out of my pocket and started to think about all of the fun that I had had with Breanna and her family during my spring breaks in College. It is funny to think of where I am and how something as simple a paper figure or a film can take me back to times in my life that seem so much more important now that I look back on them. I am very lucky to be given these mental holidays and even luckier to have such special people and places to visit while I am there. War is a funny thing.

With that I leave you with a picture of the Regatta from ’03…

Peace and Love- Roadshow 6

P.S. the spray coming off of the back of the boats is a rooster tail

Thursday, March 02, 2006

The end of a lie...

I have a little bit of truth to share with you the loyal members of the TRS.

When I sent out my address a few months ago I was under the impression that I was being promoted the next day. It didn’t happen and I didn’t tell anyone, many members of my family and numbered members of the TRS were not aware. The military screwed up my paperwork. I didn’t want to bother anyone with that particular issue, because I figured you had enough to worry about without thinking about the military giving me the big hard one up my six. This is terribly cliché however; I lied to make things easier on you. That sucks, I know, I should have told you the truth.

By the by I was promoted yesterday- my promotion was not back-dated to January first like it should have been, but that is the next fight that I face and that is a small matter.

I hope things are going well at home and I can’t wait to be home this summer. In addition to being promoted in rank I was also promoted in duty position as I now have command of my own humvee. It did happen because somebody screwed up but there were other guys that could have been given the command (because they outrank me) so in that I am pleased.

So there it is charade over, I will be writing a little bit about my involvement in the turmoil of last week tomorrow, so look for that soon.

Until then…

Peace and Love- Roadshow 6