Archive for the ‘deployment’ Category

Elk Grove and Sacramento area folks:


2009
04.08

Here is the text of an e-mail I received from one of our city council members regarding the death of a soldier from Elk Grove. I was asked to disseminate as widely as possible:

Dear Fellow Elk Grove Citizen:

As all of you know, we lost one of our own with the death of Sgt. Bryan Hall who was killed in Iraq.  CCSD Fire Chief Steve Foster is coordinating a tribute as Sgt. Hall comes home and has asked that we help him get the message out into the community.

The CCSD Fire Department will transport Sgt. Hall on a fire engine from executive airport on Sunday morning. Chief Foster is asking that, we as fellow citizens, line Elk Grove Blvd. to pay tribute to Sgt. Hall. The procession will on the Elk Grove Blvd. near the fire station by 11:30 a.m. on Sunday, April 19th with a 50 vehicle procession. Chief Foster will be also be coordinating the flags that morning.

Please forward this email on to everyone on your email list and let’s do what we do best in Elk Grove, come together to honor one of our own.

Sincerely,
Connie Conley

If you are in Elk Grove or the greater Sacramento area, please join us tomorrow morning at 11:30 on EGB near Elk Grove-Florin Road for the procession to the Elk Grove Mortuary. This family has expressed an interest in having their son’s sacrifice acknowledged publicly and would be comforted by the hero’s welcome that both they and SSG Hall deserve.

I love my siblings


2008
12.25

No. I really do. Primarily because they have yet to divulge my most embarrassing secrets involving The New Monkees.

…but also because they never pass up the opportunity to serve up humor on a capitalist platter. Like last night. My father sent Christmas gifts to all of us from Afghanistan which arrived in large wooden trunks sometime between Thanksgiving and Christmas Eve. My sister Bethany was subsequently enticed to wrap said gifts and present them to us under the tree. For instance, my daughter Sophie starting to unwrap her gift:

…and my daughter wearing the burqa my father sent to her:

The burqa in the intentionally incongruent packaging, just in case you didn’t catch on to my sister’s awesome sense of humor:

My future sister-in-law-even-if-she-and-my-brother-don’t-realize-it-because-I’m-keeping-her-no-matter-what posing in our new burqas. (Also, her blog is here.)

My husband, looking very much like an extra in Charlie Wilson’s War:

My brother posing in my burqa because he’s never been one to be left out:

Merry Christmas!

9/11


2008
09.11

I know, I know. Another commemorative 9/11 post.

Still. There are times, like today, when it seems more than a little surreal that the events of a morning seven years ago led to my dad being deployed to Afghanistan. Where he has been for months, is right now and will be for some time to come.

Talk about the personal being the political.

 My daughter and father

My daughter riding on the shoulders of her Papa Sarge. 

Dad walking down the flight line

My dad walking to his aircraft on the way out. All my readers from military families are probably very familiar with this vantage point of their loved one. ;)

Chinook helicopters taking off

CH-47 helicopters taxi and prepare for departure to Afghanistan.

Happy Birthday Dad


2008
08.22

I promise not to publicly embarass you this year by doing something like, oh, telling the internet that you own the soundtrack to every major Broadway production since Stephen Sondheim was born. Or that you slavishly sing along to them in the car and at home. Or that you have a particular yen for “I Feel Pretty” from Westside Story

See? I totally wouldn’t do that because I realize that informing people that this: 

My dad

…likes to sing this:

…most definitely qualifies as a violation of the “don’t ask don’t tell” policy. So enjoy your birthday and know that, for once, I will do my level best to preserve the perfectly macho facade that you have so carefully cultivated over the years.

P.S. – Is it physically possible to fit 57 candles on top of an MRE?

P.P.S. - Do you still make the Taliban POWs sashay around and call you Maria, or has that been declared an official violation of the Geneva Conventions?

Mission: Idiotic


2008
04.30

I love being a student. Especially a mortuary school student. Not only do I get to attend classes in the Winchester Mystery Trailer but I suspect I may be one of only a handful of people throughout the country who can legitimately incorporate photos from rotten dot com into a class assignment.

Yesterday I was finishing up a project on putrefaction and an accompanying visual aid which - I’m quite proud to report – was adequately disgusting, when it became apparent that I was going to need some crafty-type stuff to get the photos and cards to stick to the poster board the way I wanted.

That’s when I went to Joann’s. You know, the crafty-type store with lots of gingham and fake flowers and cutesy pink ribbony things that attract hordes of uptight soccer moms who never get laid or use the word “fuck”?

Yeah. That store. Oh boy do they love me there.

So I go. And I have to say that there is nothing more fun than cruising down aisles filled with muffy moms comparing puff paints while I search for glue with which I can affix photos of bloated, drowned, and dried-out corpses.

Good times… especially if you could have been in my head.

For a few minutes I actually felt like I was on an undercover mission. A mission in search of crafty contraban and the staff at Joann’s had been specifically instructed to be on the lookout for student morticians in order to apprehend us before we breached their perimeter. And the other customers would be in on it too; if it was discovered that I had in fact gotten past the crack team manning the cash registers the customers would provide a secondary line of defense in order to prevent me from defiling their zots or glue sticks with my dark and disturbing crafting. Maybe they would trip me in the scrapbooking section or try to waylay me at an end-cap dedicated to felting.

…and now I totally lost my train of thought because my dad just called in the middle of me writing this post to tell me that despite the fact that the Army licked a stamp and sent him via priority mail, he has managed to travel for five days without actually being dumped off in Afghanistan yet. At this point I’m not sure who’s worse in the reliability department: the government or Delta Airlines.

“So where are you then?”

“Turk-ij-is-tanople?”

“Dad, that’s not a country.”

“Manna-fanna-stan?”

“Sounds like the name game.”

“Turk-a-jerk-my-chain-is-stan?”

“Now you’re just being silly.”

“Ok, I give up. I don’t know what country we’re in. I don’t know what time zone we’re in. I don’t even know what my name is.”

“Well at least you’re in the section with countries that end in -stan.”

“True. Hey, wanna burqa? They’re super cheap here. Wave a few American dollar bills and the women practically fly out of them.”

“Just in case”


2008
03.01

As most of my friends and family know, I’m not really the kind of person who is comfortable with one-on-one sap, sentimentality, or pretty much any situation in which sarcasm cannot be comfortably interjected. I’ve been told that I’m “not genuine” and “difficult to get to know”. I would tend to agree with these people though I admit that I am myself confounded by my own discomfort in these situations.

At any rate, this state of affairs led to a conundrum last week when my father finally lit out for the Afghan territories. I went down my emotional checklist and ticked off the following: anxiety, fear, an odd sense of homesickness for my dad. Somewhere in the miasma floated the notion that he is too old for this crap, that after nearly forty years in the service my dad should have been spared deployment and allowed to remain home with his fiancee and grandchildren. (And yes, we’ve covered this territory in the last blog, haven’t we? To bitch about his decision to make the military a career would be disrespectful. So he goes to South Asia and we wait at home and take comfort in the fact that mandatory retirement will ensure that this will be the final deployment of his career.)

Chinooks taxi to the end of the runway.

All of this was complicated by the fact that just days prior to his departure my dad called me up to apologize for not being a good father. (What?!?!) Seems he’s been carrying a lot of pent-up guilt because he believes he yelled at us too much, didn’t spend enough time with us, didn’t pay for me to go to college. The apology for what he envisions as his insurmountable faults as a father were disconcerting enough without the note of finality throughout the call itself: it was as if her were saying a few final words. You know, “just in case”.

At any rate, all the weird mental crap that accompanies watching your father go off to war and having those ”just in case” phone calls is really poorly expressed in person when you are as emotionally maladjusted as I am. Finally, someone I knew gave me an idea: write a letter to him. Tell him not to open it until he is a world away, say six thousand miles. Or several time zones. Or Oklahoma.

Chinooks wait on the tarmac.

 So here’s the letter, which I’m posting on the internet for the world to see because I am emotionally inept and putting this on a public forum makes perfect sense in some odd dimension that has yet to be uncovered by science:

Dad,

The other day you apologized for yelling at us when we were kids. This is not the first time you’ve apologized for what you think are your enormous parental shortcomings.

Please stop carrying those regrets around. You were a wonderful father. You still are. For decades you did your best and all of us kids could see that as plain as day. No matter what the situation you always weighed your options and erred on the side of trying to do the “right” thing, even when the “right” thing wasn’t the “fun” thing, the “easy” thing, or the most “expedient” thing. Just in case you hadn’t noticed, having a dad who does the right thing and sets that kind of an example is a pretty big deal.

National Guard Hangar

For every regret you have about yelling at us kids I remember afternoons that you would let me come running with you. Or that you built a blanket fort for us. Or took us on bike rides. Or drove us to the “big library” in Modesto and let us check out books, look at the koi and eat McDonald’s french fries on the stone tables outside. Or took us to Donnelly Park so we could feed the ducks. Do you remember taking all of us to the Steinhart Aquarium for the first time when we were still little kids, and how you were so patient that you let us ogle every flippin’ exhibit even though at some point I’m sure you wanted to scream “Alright! Get moving! It’s just another freaking fish already!” Or taking off your shoes and running away from the surf at Ocean Beach in a gaggle of your squealing offspring?

Child holding flag

I remember you taking us to Chuck E. Cheese once and not eating the pizza. When I asked you why you weren’t eating you said you really didn’t like Chuck E. Cheese pizza. So I asked you why we were all there if you didn’t like the pizza and you said, “because you kids enjoy it here.” Do you remember bringing home all that Plexiglas and making a watertight maze for me so that I could test a goldfish’s memory for the science fair in the eighth grade? Or taking us through the hangar at Aero-Nostalgia and letting us walk through the bombay of a B-52 (or how we were the only family on Driftwood Drive who had the nose of that damned bomber in our garage for six months while you repaired it?) Or showing us the remnants of a Kamikaze fighter that had been pried out of a hillside and brought to the states for reconstruction?

Do you remember pulling the car over to the side of some mountain highway in Calaveras County and having us get out because you spotted a California hairy spider and knew we kids would get a kick out of getting a closer look? Or the numerous occasions that you would take us to the National Guard hangar and let us climb around Hueys, Chinooks, and Apaches?

Sophie and her Papa Sarge prior to departure.

Personally, I consider the most generous instance of your magnanimity as a father to be the time that you didn’t shoot me dead when I wrecked in the driver’s side door of your truck and then tried to concoct a story about light poles jumping out at me. I thank you for that because I’ll tell you what; if my kids do half the things to me that I did to you I’m going to need to step up my drinking habit and probably throw a few recreational drugs into the mix. For many kids the conclusion to that little fiasco with the truck would have involved an early grave. You let me off with a stern lecture and a body shop bill that only made me wish I had been introduced to an early grave.

Sometimes when you get to feeling bad about what you imagine your faults as a parent were maybe you should think about all the stuff you did right. Like all the times you drove several hours to retrieve your oldest daughter’s car because it went kaput. Again. For the umpteenth time. (Are you feeling the automobile-related theme here?) Or scratched up the money to let me visit relatives in Oregon as a kid because you wanted me to know my aunts, uncles and cousins up there. Or tolerated a veritable zoo in my bedroom even when the parakeets, doves, aquarium pumps and hamster wheels kept you up all night.

Charlie waves goodbye to his Papa Sarge.

Or how, when I was a kid and you took me to airshows you encouraged me to try anything once, including skydiving. And then as an adult – after a local woman had been killed skydiving the day before I was scheduled to go - you called to talk me out of it and only hung up when I promised to call you as soon as I was safely back on the ground after the jump.

Or how about all the stuff you did that had nothing to do with us kids, but went a long way toward setting a good example for us? Like pulling the car over to help all those people stranded on the side of the road over the years? Or picking up the tab for a young family at a restaurant because the father was a low-ranking Airman and you knew he didn’t make crap for pay? Or helping put together and refurbish bicycles for kids whose parents couldn’t afford to give them Christmas gifts? Or when you rescued a car from the wrecking ball so that you could sling load it and drop it in front of a crowd at an air show because it was an amusing thing to do?

Whenever you get around to getting down on yourself about your faults I hope you think about all the stuff you did right. I hope you think about reading The Princess and the Pea to me on the first night we spent in the house on Driftwood and wiping fire ants off Matthew’s feet when he toddled on their hill in pursuit of fresh peaches on Faith Home Road. I hope you remember welding us lovely bunches of wire-framed daisies and showing us how to change a flat. Oh, and how you didn’t kill us when we were all teenagers; an act of restraint which deserves a medal in and of itself.

Sophie watching her Papa Sarge as his aircraft winds up for take-off.

I hope you remember telling us silly stories about your first deployment – like when you and your buddies were bored and decided to set your boots on fire to amuse the locals in Korea. Or the family stories such as the time Aunt Carol chased you out of the house with a butcher knife because you shut the power off while she was listening to Elvis. Or the story about Grandpa Armstrong accepting far less than he could afford for a truck he was selling because the man who wanted to buy it couldn’t afford the asking price yet needed the truck to support his family.

I hope you realize that it was only because you were such a good father that I was able to recognize an equally good man and marry him. I hope you know that my initial career path – to be a high school English teacher – was inspired by the example you set for me and when I realized that I would be a disaster as a high school teacher I started down the road to becoming a mortician for the same reason I wanted to be a teacher; because like you, I want to live a useful life in service to others. I hope you know that because you were such a good dad I want to repay the favor to my own kids and be a good mom. I hope you know that my husband’s and my decision to sell our big house and buy a smaller one was made because we both wanted me to be home with our kids so they might know the same kind of love and dedication that my husband and I knew growing up.

You always get so down on yourself for not being able to afford to put me through college but you forget that you raised me to be the kind of person who could spend sixty hours a week waiting tables and still carry a full academic load. (And you know what? It wasn’t always easy or fun, but there was a lot of great experience packed into those years and enough fun times to make it go quickly. I wouldn’t change the ways things happend for the world. Besides, perpetual comfort and aversion to risk never results in a very interesting or worthwhile person.)

Chinooks fill the sky over Stockton.

At any rate, I had only intended to write a quick note and here I am going on seven pages. Sorry. It’s just that I don’t want you to go one more day dwelling on your faults. You weren’t a perfect parent. I wasn’t the perfect daughter. But you were and still are a wonderful father and a terrific grandfather. I hope this deployment goes quickly for you and you hurry home to us so that you can get married and enjoy a well-deserved happy ending with Suzanne and become a fabulous step-father.

Love,

Your oldest daughter who is named after you so that should earn me a few bonus points in the last will and testament department, no?

Dad walking to the flight line after saying goodbye.

Veteran’s Day


2007
11.11

A couple of days ago I was standing in line at Starbuck’s when a woman opened verbal fire on one of the employees. Apparently her drink didn’t taste like it had been made with non-fat milk and she had specifically stated that she wanted non-fat milk and dammit, hadn’t the barista noticed her manicured nails, well-coiffed ‘do and very expensive purse? Was it not obvious from her very pampered state that in her universe not having your latte made to the exact specifications that you spent ten minutes communicating to the cashier was not just an inconvenience, it WAS A MAJOR CRISIS?

But let’s back up shall we?

Several months ago my dad’s unit was put on notice that they were about to take another tour through the land of the two-way gunnery range. Could be Iraq again or, maybe just maybe the Army would shake it up a bit and send them to Afghanistan because you know? Seeing a third world shit hole that was different from the last one might just distract them enough to make having RPGs fired at their aircraft bearable.

Well, just recently his unit passed the last of the qualifications for deployment and were given the green light. Ladies and gentlemen, update your wills, grab a body bag and kiss your kids goodbye because come February we’re heading out for the South Asian Vacation.

Since its inception, the mission in Afghanistan has ostensibly been about defending ourselves from further attacks by rogue groups such as Al Qaeda. For the record I believe this work to be necessary – albeit we were definitely a little late on the uptake in this region – and I support the effort.

I also acknowledge that our military in its current incarnation is an all-volunteer organization. My dad is in because he made the choice to be there and whining about him being sent to do the job that he trained for and accepted willingly would be disrespect of the highest kind.

That being said, I am beginning to have doubts about the war effort. Not so much with our military. When unfettered by idiotic bureaucracy the men and women of our military have proven themselves most capable. My doubts lie with us and our worthiness of such efforts. Because honestly? I look around and I find myself thinking “for these people my dad might get his ass blown off?”

I mean, it’s one thing for people to let their hair down and have a zone in which they can relax and feed their brain on silly things. It’s quite another to become utterly consumed by shallow bullshit and allow it to weaken our global perspective. For example, why have consumers decided to make the celebrity rag industry such a ginormous cash cow? Am I the only one who thinks that Brad and Angelina’s marriage is irrelevant? Who realizes that Britney Spears troubles are not worth the paper that tabloids continue to print them on?

Unfortunately, our slack-jawed obsession with celebrities is nothing compared to other weaknesses in our society. Such as the trend displayed by a few of my classmates who, after having made horrible decisions that landed them on public assistance, shrug off the opportunities afforded them by publicly funded financial aid programs and cut class. Then, on the odd occasion they actually do show up, complain bitterly about the impact that their failing grades will have on their financial aid status.

Or some of my neighbors who, about every six months, resurrect the idea of installing video equipment to record every square inch of our community because privacy is meaningless when there’s a one in a three gazillion chance that your child can be abducted and sold into the white slave trade. This is probably one of the more depressing ones to me since I question the ability of our society to survive when we are incapable of responding to the latest media boogeyman in a way that’s more meaningful than slobbering hysteria.

How about the people who claim that the proof of their magnanimity can be found in their support of goofy shit like socialized medicine? So let me get this straight, you get awesome human points for voting away the paychecks of your fellow citizens but can’t be bothered to dirty your hands volunteering at a battered women’s shelter or halfway house. How big of you. Hypocrisy should be painful.

…and don’t even get me started on the viewership that justified the making of a second season of “Flavor of Love“.

So yeah, I get a little irritated when I think of my dad and his colleagues being deployed to places Iraq and Afghanistan to protect the interests of a nation filled with people who can’t be bothered to put down the People magazine, do their damned homework, cope rationally with life’s inherent risks or abandon their comfort zone long enough to give a genuine leg up to their fellow man. Or maintain enough perspective to deal with low-fat milk and stop bitching at the underpaid Starbuck’s employee already.

Sometimes it’s necessary to expect members of our military to make uncommon sacrifices on behalf our our nation. But part of the deal is, or at least it should be, that all of us make the effort to be worthy of that sacrifice. This Veteran’s Day we should challenge ourselves to be better people whose lives and energies aren’t bled dry by brainless consumerism or massive efforts to sequester ourselves in tiny worlds in which we are the star occupant. Instead we should honor our veterans by reaching out and taking minor discomforts in stride (and trust me, anything that doesn’t threaten your life or the life of someone you love is a minor discomfort) in order to justify our continued existence in a world that has cost many their lives to achieve.

Are combat zones wheelchair and walker accessible?


2007
08.06

So my dad, the twin rotor Army maven, came back from Iraq in 2004. You would think that upon touching down at Travis AFB he would have kissed terra firma, gone through a McDonald’s drive-thru, caught a titty show and called it a day.

But nooooooo. Mr. Being-In-One-Piece-Is-So-Overrated has been eagerly awaiting redeployment ever since returning from his Persian Excursion. Care to guess what he did over the weekend? Without telling any of his children?

He drove his Chinook-flying ass down to Camp Roberts in San Luis Obispo to do some weapons qualifications and VOLUNTEER for a mission to Afghanistan. Dude’s going to be 56 this month and he’s putting his hand up to go to the land of the two-way gunnery range.

…and people wonder why I drink.

I blame my brother because Matt, that jaywalking ticket back in 1990? Totally drove him to this.