Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Thanksgiving in Iraq 2005

Well, HAPPY THANKSGIVING everyone!  I hope you are all spending time with family and being very thankful for all you have.  :) As for myself, I’m having a pretty standard day.  I’ve been back from AQ for almost 2 weeks and I can’t believe how busy I’ve been.  Some of you I’ve emailed more with then others, so if anything in the rest of this email is repetitive, I apologize. 
 The temperature dropped a solid 10 or 15 degrees about 3 days ago, so it’s been pretty chilly here at night.  I checked the weather for the next few days, though, and it looks like it’ll warm up a little bit again.  Either way, during the day it is pretty perfect here.  It’s sunny about 6 days out of the week and the high is about 70.  I’ve started walking to work in the afternoons now and I enjoy it quite a bit.  It’s about a mile and a half hike and I get to see the sun setting over Lake Habbaniyah if I come in around 4 in the afternoon.  As long as the weather is pleasant, I plan to make a habit of this little walk.
 Let’s see…the rest of my time up in AQ was great.  We assisted in over 50% of the strike packages (aka: killing bad guys) and flew 2 flights a day all day every day.  Needless to say, we stayed busy, but I also had a blast with the Marines up there.  I also met a female CH-46 pilot who was super nice and we got to chat a lot about flying and, really, about life in general.  It was pretty cool and I enjoyed having the female company, albeit only briefly.  My trip back to TQ was kind of a long one.  We stopped in Al Asad and had a 7 hour wait until our C-130 flight left for Camp Taqaddum.  While we were there, a Sgt from the JSTARS detachment picked me and LCpl Koopmann up and showed us around part of the base.  Al Asad is HUGE!!   We only saw a tiny part of it and it still seemed gigantic compared to TQ.  Anyway, it was cool to see yet another base and get to see another one of the intel platforms we have out here. 

So, I am working slightly different hours in TQ than I used to (coming in around 3pm instead of 8pm) – which I like.  Although, somehow I’ve ended up staying until 4 or 5am almost every night which is almost as late was I was here before.  Hopefully by next week I’ll start leaving earlier so I have time to actually sleep and workout again.  I’ve only run once this week (boo! :( ). Also, a couple of the mornings I’ve had doctors’ appointments to finish up the flight school package stuff.  I’m just waiting on a couple more things and then I’ll send it off next week. 

Work has been good.  I like being busy, and for the most part, the dynamic here is really positive.  They changed the night crew up, though, and I miss the guys who were a little funnier, but with all the projects I’ve got on my plate now I don’t have as much time for “smoking and joking” anymore anyway.  Speaking of “projects”…I’ve finally been tasked with some “real” work to do and it will definitely be my chance to prove to the CO that I am a capable Marine.  I basically have 3 different video-related products to produce – 1 in the immediate future, 1 on a weekly basis, and a big one due at the end of the deployment.  It’s something I can task my Marines to do, then monitor their progress, and come up with a tangible product at the end.  So, I’ll be working on that stuff on top of the normal work I was already doing. 

The only cool thing about today was that they had pie at chow.  It was goooooood.  I had a slice of pumpkin, sweet potato, pecan, and cherry….c’mon it’s Thanksgiving! :)  Oh, well, that and today was also the 3 month mark from when we left the states.  So, only about 4 more months to go!!!

Well, I need to wrap this up and get back to reading some reports, so I’ll let you all go.  Thank you, too, to everyone who has sent packages, letters, and email.  Every single one of those is appreciated more then you know!!
God Bless!! :)
Sarah

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Al Qa'im Chronicles - Final thoughts...Less About War, More About Men

 14 November 2005, 19:00 Monday

Al Asad, Iraq à Here I sit in the Al Asad J-COT waiting for a flight out on a C-130 to TQ.  My day started around 0600 when my alarm went off and I hit snooze a few times.  Jen got home around 0700 and we chatted briefly before she went to bed.  She was like, “I can’t believe you’re leaving today! L  I didn’t approve that!" J  She’s really nice.  She also said it was really nice meeting me and to let her know if I ever need anything.  It’s a bummer because I’ll miss kind of a having a gal pal.  Anyway, I packed up and went to work for a few hours.  We were really busy because the Marines are taking over the city of Ubaydi today, so work was good.  At 10:00ish, I went for a dinky run, waited for the shower, showered, packed, went to work, then to J-COT after the goodbyes.  Funky was super bummed out; he’s a good guy à very nice note enclosed that he gave me last night.  Anyway, we flew from AQ to Camp Rawah to Haditha Dam (which was super cool) then to Al Asad where we’ve had like a six hour wait.  I heard an F-14 had to divert to AA this afternoon and it could have easily been Scott, or at least someone from his squadron I know, but I can’t figure out if they’re still here or not. L  It’s made me think a lot about Scott today.  Well, I think about him quite a bit sometimes anyway because I have such fond memories of times with him in VA Beach…very fond.  And it makes me homesick and miss him and VA Beach and his friends when I daydream about this past summer.  We had SUCH a great time together!  And now as I’m writing, with my iPod on shuffle, a song from Mike’s mix came on.  It’s so perfect for this recent break up with him:
                Suddenly I’m feeling like you wanted something more than this
                If you don’t stop giving it, you won’t know how it feels
                Don’t start sleeping in, you don’t know how I feel
                ‘Cause God knows that I let you down

                This is a wall you try to shake
                This is my focus you try to break
                This is the fall that I have to take to know that you care
I think his comments about this song (three years ago) were that he knew he let me down because he couldn’t give me what I deserved.  Whatever.  He didn’t even try – AGAIN – this time.  One similar thing that I really like about both Scott and Mike was their love of music.  You know what, though?  The CD’s they burned for me were very different and I think Mike’s choices revealed his selfishness whereas more of Scott’s songs were more romantic.  I still think about Mike, though, L and am brainstorming a plan to get him to come visit me in March and I will just be aloof with him and hurt him.  I know I could probably never pull that off, though, and it would only bring me down and depress me.  But the thing I keep asking myself is: Why doesn’t he want to be with me?!  Why am I not worth it to him?!  So many other great guys think so highly of me, admire me, heck, have fallen in love with me, or meet me and want to date me, or get to know me and want to date me, think I’m great, etc.  Yet, Mike is so willing to throw me away when any man who’s gotten to know me has fallen for mand wanted to be with me (in the last couple of years) and/or tell me any man who wins my hearts will be so lucky!  Then there’s this one guy, Mike, who is probably the least deserving of my love of anyone I’ve been with who I end up loving the most! L 

I’m so lonely here in Iraq. I think of everyone – Alex, Matt, Scott, Chris…even Patrick or DJ – as options and it is confusing.  All I’d wanted was Mike and somehow, half a world away (as I listen to Esthero sing over and over again “half a world away”) everything reminds me of Mike.  Music is so powerful. O.A.R. came on and that makes me think of Pensacola.  Oh to be in Pensacola right now! J  If it is God’s plan, I would really like to move back to Pensacola next year.  Speaking of P-cola, I’ve pondered the possibility of Scott and I being there at the same time and how much fun that would be to date…like VA Beach.  That’s how dating someone is supposed to be!  With someone in the same city, who you see on a daily basis but miss, and who you have a blast with and are at ease with.  I am sad I didn’t run into Scott today at AA.  Wow, I miss romance.  Athlete’s “Wires” is playing on my iPod.  I miss sharing my beauty and love and passion and depth with a man…emotionally, physically, intellectually…spiritually.  I know I have so much to give and I want to give it to someone, I want to bring un-nameable, immeasurable joy and passion and love and longing to someone.  I want to be someone’s baby, I want to be taken care of yet seen as strong and dependable and beautiful and cherished and noticed as different and special…and for me to feel exactly the same way about him.  I wish I could play guitar and sing and I’d write my own songs and play them, and it’d be great.  That would be so cool!  I’m going to do great things one day.  I’m going to be great wife and mom and keep loving my family so much and have a fun job and life! J  I miss DC.  I miss dancing.  I miss meeting new people.  I miss flirting.  I miss laughing out of control with girlfriends.  I miss my parents.  I miss Teddy.  I miss just doing nothing with Becci. I miss riding my bike.  I miss dressing up.  I miss going out.  I miss playing soccer.  I miss home.  I miss driving my car.  I miss Church.  I miss real fellowship.
PS I finished the Pelican Brief today; it was good. 

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

The Al Qa'im Chronicles - A Goodbye letter from a dear friend


Although I save nearly every letter, card, and email I ever get, this hand-written note from "Funky" is one of the few I know practically by heart and one which I felt was so special that I stapled it into my journal (versus putting it in a box with a thousand other letters).  He was one of the few truly good men I met in the Marine Corps - he was a mentor, big bro, and great friend and I was so blessed to have him as a colleague on that deployment. 

13 November Al Qaim, Iraq

Dear Sarah
I’m so glad that you came out with us for a while and so are the guys.  You bring the sunshine wherever you go and bless everyone’s life for having been part of yours.  Thanks for everything but most of all, thanks for being who you are.  We will all miss you very much.

Always remember that beautiful women are a dime a dozen but a woman whose beauty is but an outward reflection of her virtue and character is priceless beyond measure.  That is what sets you apart and makes you one in a million.  That and a thousand other good adjectives that come to mind…

Sooner or later, but with perfect timing, I promise, God is going to send some like-minded and outrageously fortunate Christian fellow into your life who will recognize what a wonderful human being you are and will love you unconditionally from the depths of his soul.  That was a metaphor, but it’s really going to happen.  Between now and then, keep walking in the light, keep chasing your dreams, and keep being you.  You’re one of the good ones, Sarah, and I know you’ll do great things.  God has an awesome plan for your life!

I’m glad that we’re friends and I wish for you every kind of happiness.  I’ll be praying for you, kiddo.

Dave
Psalm 25:4-5
Funky filming our MC Bday celebration in AQ

The Al Qa'im Chronicles - The last couple of days



12Nov 2005, 22:30 Saturday
Really, nothing eventful happened today yet again.  I woke up more tired than ever, but made it through the day ok.  Email and work till noonish, walk to lunch, work more till 3ish, napped, ran, back to work – pretty regular day in AQ.  I didn’t feel too down or anything, and after work watched a little bit of “Napoleon Dynamite” with the guys.  Oh! I got all excited this afternoon talking about getting a motorcycle.  I could get an awesome, used one for $4-5,000.  One of the main deterrents is whether or not I want to spend my money that way.  I want to get a new (and nice) mountain bike, probably some gear for that, an actual triathlon racing bike, more gear for that, and so on.  All that could easily add up to $5k.  Anyway, I’ve still got plenty of time to think about all of that, research, and talk about it.

Maybe I don’t really miss Mike. Maybe I’m just "frustrated" and lonely for a man.  Well, I definitely long for moments… J  Well, whatever, because there’ll be none of that for FOUR MORE MONTHS!!  Holy cow!  I hope I can make it! ;-p
Oh, I had a decent little run-lunge-walk run today after my nap. 
13 Nov 2005, 21:30 SundayWell, I had a pretty lax day today.  Moseyed over to work around 6:30, did some emailing while on the headset, went to lunch with Dave, came back to work for a bit, and then came back to my room for (what was supposed to be a quick) nap.  I woke Jen up, though, and we ended up having a really good chat for about an hour.  It was fun because it felt like good old girl chat, like a slumber party or something because we were both in our beds, learning on our pillows chatting.  Man, I miss girlfriends! L  She kind of reminds me of Lori Kruslich.  Anyway, she’s super cool.  Then I napped for almost 2 hours (yet I’m still tired) and went back to work and basically hung out the rest of the night.
LCpl Koopman and I are headed back to TQ tomorrow.  It will be a bummer to leave, but I am really looking forward to getting all my mail! J

The last couple of weeks were good and went by pretty fast.  It’s too bad because dual ops starts up again tomorrow in Ubaydi so there’s be more action.
Really missing family, Teddy, Becci, Tori, Theresa, Margie, Matt, Scott, and Chris.

Monday, November 21, 2011

The Al Qa'im Chronicles - Days 8 through 10

gorgeous sunset in northwest Iraq

9 November, 2200 Wednesday
Well, they were hammering away at something all night, so I only got about 4 hours of sleep tops.  I was coughing and sneezing all day, but had a decent one.  Flew at work again today, scrounged a somewhat good lift in at the gym, and hung out a bit tonight after work.  I am very, very homesick but feel ok overall.  I think I look very tired, though.
Boys on the brain:   Matt – I love him and miss him, but who the heck knows anymore; Alex – if I stay in Cali, a definite possibility to hang out; Chris – still in love with me (according to him), but I’m not sure how I feel about him.  Sometimes I think I could be with him long-term; DJ – I don't think there's much of a real romantic love interest left there anymore, though, but love our friendship; Scott – I like him so much, but we are too different.  He’s still got very strong feelings for me and I do miss him a lot, too;  Patrick – has said he wants to date, but I definitely don’t for lots of reasons;  Jim – Funky’s best friend who he said he wants to set me up with; Mike – I haven’t had any contact with him since that last IM convo and it’s been great.  My soul is finally being set free from that...
Just food for thought…

L-R: Daniels, Cornejo, me, Koopman
11 November 2005, 2100 Friday

Yesterday was another pretty uneventful day at work.  I went for a decent run, but it was painful because I felt like I had a 10 pound brick in my bowels! L  Last night we had a pretty lame Marine Corps Birthday “celebration.”  It was kind of a downer especially thinking of last year’s ball and what a blast that was.  Oh well.
USMC Birthday Presentation in Iraq
I woke up so tired again this morning for another calm day at work.  I’ve gotten a lot of emails the last couple fo days which has been nice, and Patrick says I have a ton of mail and packages at TQ.  I’m really looking forward to opening all of that, and having my own room again. 
So, I had been going really strong for over a week as far as not thinking about Mike goes, but a lot of conversations lately have kind of brought him up.  And now, I’ve got my iPod on shuffle and “I Know” from Pat McGee came on.

I know I won’t be there tomorrow, baby, now
I know I wasn’t there today
These times are harder than they used to be and now
I’m fine if you’re still thinking of me
Honestly, I don’t think my feelings for Mike are healthy – before, during, or after being “together.” L
I feel like our little group here is pretty close.  After work tonight, SSgt Cornejo and Dave and I sat around and talked, and Top and Tim were there at the end, too.  Plus, I spend the afternoons (post nap or PT) in sweats or PT gear and it’s just comfy. J  You know what I think is so funny, though?  That like 45 year old mean call me “ma’am.”  It’s just kind of a funny concept to me.  Even Tim who is a retired Gunny and works for Boeing now, calls me “ma’am” all the time.  The guys here are nice, though.  They’re quasi-flirty yet big brothery to me.  I guess if I needed any ego boosters, I’ve gotten plenty since I’ve been out here because they always make comments about how people stare at me, or that I have “hottie skills,” or allude to me being hot (or sometimes don’t even allude!).  Just observations.  It's kind of funny, kind of not.  Also, I must have adapted to all the helicopter noise here because I seem to be sleeping better.  It’s just that I always have to get up to pee in the middle of the night!
Well, as far as all the “ego-boosters” go, they essentially mean nothing to me (obviously).  I want a real man, a real relationship, someone who I can 100% depend on in all matters of life; I want passion and compatibility.  I want someone with Scott’s brain, and fun side, and love for music…and Mike’s drive and smarts and success and physical connection and passion…and Matt’s free spirit and truly good heart and uniqueness and big smile and love for me…and Chris’s dependability and love of family and willingness to stand up to me when I’m being a brat yet understanding when he needs to be…and DJ’s love of the Lord and organization and trustworthiness and ability to sit and talk about anything.  SIGH. 
I am lonely.  I am homesick.  I miss my friends…my GIRL friends.  I miss socializing, dancing, getting dressed up, going out to dinner, riding my bike, swimming, playing soccer, TEDDY.  I haven’t even been here three months yet!  I already can’t wait to get home.  I can’t wait for the time to pass and the day to come when my heart doesn’t remember Mike anymore; to think fondly of him just doesn’t make sense and I hate when I miss him.  If I could be around family and friends and a good man, I could easily forget him.
I took a nap today even though it was gorgeous out because I was just so sleepy.  I hope I get regular (with PT and poop! J hahaha) at TQ.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Al Qa'im Chronicles Day 6&7


7 November 2005, 2230 Monday
Another good and quick day today at work.  We blew up LOTS of buildings.  In fact, a couple of the GBU’s dropped were dropped by Shaggy!  (Scott’s friend we hung out with in VA Beach).  How cool is that?!  I didn’t work out today, but did laundry in the afternoon instead.  Lots of laughs all day, but worked about 16 hours.  Feeling a little better but have the sniffles.  I need good sleep so desperately.
Dear Lord, please keep special watch over all the Marines and soldiers throughout this operation.  Send love to my lovelies J, be with Scott on his flight with Puck, Chris on his flight home, and Alex at work.  Fill me with your spirit, Jesus, and thank you so much for all you do every day.

8 November 2005, 2011 Tuesday
We had a pretty uneventful day work-wise.  The Marines have basically already cleared the city.  Although, tonight some Tomcats dropped GBU’s again.  I got some Sudafed and Tylenol for my cold today because I was feeling very icky.  Took a short nap this afternoon and then ended up going for a great run.  (I didn’t carry my pistol this time).  Even with a very strong headwind the whole backstretch I felt really smooth.  Apparently my running attracts IDF, though.  AQ hasn’t taken any in months and today on my run a round hit VERY close to me…but I just kept going.  Anyway, after my run I talked to my roomie (Capt Jen Schrantz) for a while.  She is really nice.  Then after work I had a good chat with Dave about guys, religion, and life.  I started off the day poopy, but feel pretty good now. 
Lord, I pray that You lift Theresa up right now, too.  She is feeling down and really needs your love.  Thank you for DJ’s understanding, and all my great friends that I love so much.  Help me to be more understanding and compassionate, Lord.

Scan Eagle "landing"

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Al Qa'im Chronicles Day 5

living and work spaces at AQ

6 November 2005, 2030, Sunday
Today was a good day.  Work passed pretty quickly, lunch was awesome, I watched some Dave Chapell Show with Dave, ran with Lt Deleal, lifted, back to work, shower, and back to work.  At the end of the day we blasted 80’s rock and were totally silly.  It was a blast! My Marines are great.  I would rather stay here than TQ if I could get a permanent living space.  Having a fun crew to work with makes such a huge (positive) difference. 

Oh, this morning, we had eyes on a building they were about to drop bombs on, and all of a sudden a group of women and children came down the street and stood in the courtyard of that house.  We called friendlies off, saving 20 innocent Iraqis’ lives; it gave everyone a really good feeling.  Other than that, the insurgents mostly stayed inside, so we didn’t see too much action.  Oh, I also talked to Capt Schrantz this afternoon for a while about flying and stuff.  She was super positive about what she does and it got me all excited about going back to flight school.  Boy will I miss having Marines, though.  Also, she is a Christian and we talked about that a bit, too.

Anyway, overall, I feel very fatigued, but my morale is high again.  I totally don’t want to date Patrick and I’ve barely even thought of Mike.  I think of Chris and Matt if anyone. 

P.S. You can see even more stars in the sky here than at TQ.

P.P.S I have another new nickname/callsign they gave me here: “Pep Rally.”  Hhahaha! J

PPPS  I forgot to write about how on the flight out here, as I looked out the back hatch of the CH-53, I could see little dust tornados (Tasmanian devils) all across the desert.  I thought that was neat.

I am happy.  I confess, I feel a little chubby or something, but am feeling much more like myself again the last couple of days.  Thanks, Lord J and please read the worries of my heart, and comfort and protect all my Marine friends, family, and dear ones.
Frogs all lined up at AQ

Friday, November 18, 2011

Al Qa'im Chronicles Day 4

 5 November 2005, 2130, Saturday – D Day

So, Operation Steel Curtain kicked off today.  It was eventful and busy, but nothing my Marines couldn’t handle.  We helped find insurgents, blow up over 10 buildings, and kill bad guys.  I sat in on the mission for a while this morning and it was great; I definitely got fired up.  J  Overall, the work day was good.  I enjoy working with Dave, Cornejo, and Daniels and Koopman a lot.  I feel like everyone respects me, but we have a good time. 

I did a puny workout today in the very meager gym here, met my new roommate (a CH-46 pilot, female, Captain, very cool, but works the night shift), and dealt with a horrible all-day dust storm.  The sandstorm was the worst I’ve ever seen.  Everything is just covered with silt and I feel like my eyes, throat, and lungs are, as well.  I barely slept at all last night, so I am run down, but will truck along.  I can’t imagine how the guys out in the field feel.

I do not like Patrick “that way.”  He has some very redeeming qualities, but I don’t see me with him long-term and it’s so not worth any fling anyway because of work.  I heard from Alex today via email; it’s been over a month since he last wrote.  He sent me some pics; he is hot. J  I also got an affectionate email from Chris.  He got jets, by the way.  He still makes romantic overtures, but I dunno, ya know.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Al Qa'im Chronicles Day 3

Dave, aka: "Funky"
4 November 2005, 21:00 Friday

I got to work (aka: walked 10feet to the left) around 7:00 this morning and we had another “warm up” day because the mission got pushed back a day.  It is a pretty fun working environment.  Everyone gives me a hard time, but it is good natured and we laugh a lot.  Dave and I went to lunch and hung out a little, but mostly I was at work all day until just now.  I flew the plane (directed the payload) this afternoon for about a half hour which was super cool.  LCpl Daniels and I comm’d on the ICS.  Then I helped Top Gomez write up some awards and edited the enlisted Marines’ work after the flights were complete.  Tomorrow the big show starts.  I have so many prayers for all those Marines …over 5,000!  It was very windy all day today (which annoyed me) but I hope it lets up because I’m sure it really bugs the guys actually out in it.  Anyway, the pace will be faster and the atmosphere more serious tomorrow.  We brief at 0530 and will fly till dark all day tomorrow.

Personally, I am solid – neither high nor low.  Music is still a weakness for me as far as forgetting Mike goes.  I had such a good talk with Dave about him yesterday, but it’s still a little raw at some moments…especially when I hear David Gray, or Coldplay, or Fallout Boy, or a dozen other bands and hundreds of songs.  On another note, Patrick and I spoke briefly before I left for AQ and he said he has thought a lot about dating/wants to date.  I mean, I knew that was probably how he felt, but I went ahead and put it out in the open by point blank asking him what he felt.  I admit, there is a part of me that has thought about it, too, but I have very mixed feelings about that for a lot of reasons.  First and foremost, I do not want anything to “happen” because of work.  So, that puts an end to that in my mind, but now I’m afraid he’s going to think it’s ok to act differently with me.  I will talk to him again when I return, though, and clarify my boundaries.

On yet another “note,” I barely heard from Matt while he was home.  Well, in fact, not at all other than me calling him, and then I got a quick email from him yesterday which said he’ll be “off the radar” for a few weeks.  What the Hell?  I can’t help but feel like he hasn’t changed at all.  He talks a big game about communicating, then doesn’t follow through.  I’ve been there to talk and listen to him about Buck and then he essentially blew me off when I was having a rough week and I asked him to specifically please email me while he was home…and he didn’t.  Not once.

I want to be swept off my feet by someone who is completely wonderful inside and out and makes me forget about Mike and Matt.  A man of God whose heart is totally devoted to Him and me, super smart, funny, hot, athletic, active, loves music, etc, etc.  Anyway, I’m tired of past pain.  I want to move forward instead of always looking back on love. 

me being toolish (on purpose ;-p)
taking the bird up
about to launch

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Al Qa'im Chronicles Day 2

3 November 2005, 08:20, Thursday

I was up at 0600, out of bed at 0615 to literally stumble to work next door for the brief at 0630.  We’ve got dual ops going.  The crew here consists of Capt Funkhouser, MSgt Gomez, me, SSgt Cornejo, LCpl Daniels and LCpl Koopman, four civilians, and like four other (non-intel) VMU Marines running around.
Anyway, the showers and heads are co-ed (since Lt Deleal and I are the only two females) and that was interesting this morning walking in on a Major while he was shaving.  And as much as everyone warned me about how cold it was going to be out here, it’s not that bad.  In fact, it’s perfect during the day, a little chilly in the morning, and at night I’m in bed in a room with a heater.
 
my room in AQ
I’m reading Jarhead right now, so it’s got me in one of those pensive, journalistic mindsets kind of like when I was reading Into the Wild.  Other than my back still hurting, I am having a good time so far.  Everyone is on the headset and gets along and jokes and stuff.  (My writing’s not so hot right now because I’m actually at work).  We are 17-18 miles from the Syrian border, but in the middle of nowhere.  Ok, gotta go for now.

21:00 – The rest of the day was uneventful other than good conversation about life, etc with Dave in the afternoon.  I perked up after dinner and my back feels a little better.  It is noisy here, though, and I probably won’t sleep great again.  I will read for a while first.


Tuesday, November 15, 2011

The Chronic! What?! Cuhls! of Narnia

With the Lazy Sunday SNL short having just gone viral, many of our jokes centered around that video.  Thus, I decided to name my journal entries whilst forward at AQ The Al Qa'im Chronicles. 

Daniels at TQ J-COT
 2 November 2005, 15:20 Wednesday, Al Qa’im Iraq
So, I just got to the Al Qa’im Forward Operating Base (AQ FOB) a couple hours ago.  I am very tired and my back hurts, so I’ll write more later.
THE AL QA’IM CHRONICLES

me, about to leave TQ J-COT
Day 1 – The flight from TQ to Camp Korean Village was on a CH-53.  Both Marines to my right and left puked.  Scenery looked like Aladdin/Arabian Nights’ rolling sand dunes.  Flight DV to Camp AQ I looked out the back the whole way.  Scenery more like Arizona mesas, but hard dirt instead of rock, and all brown instead of myriad of oragnes, reds, and browns.  Arrived around 1400ish and enthusiastically greeted by Dave (Capt “Funky” Funkhouser).  He gave me a quick tour and then I read for a bit and took a short nap.  I am staying in a “hooch” (which is actually a plywood “house” that looks like the kind you drew in the first grade) with an office on the front end, a female Lt (the only other female on this whole base), a male SSgt, a male Major, (all three from MWSS), and then me at the “back door.”  I am 10ft from work. 
After my nap, we all went to dinner.  AQ is definitely different and definitely has more of a “tip of the spear” feel.  This place is still fine, but TQ is lush compared to it.  I got stared at in the chow hall.  I noticed many more Lt’s and officers, in general, here.  We are in grunt land and grunts need Lt Platoon Commanders.  After chow, I tagged along with Dave for the big cheese meeting.  It was cool.  I felt like I was in a scene from a war movie as they briefed the plans for the huge upcoming operation: STEEL CURTAIN.  This is the largest operation this close to the Syrian border ever and AQI (Al Queda Iraq)’s last major stronghold.  It is exciting to imagine my comrades catching bad guys and knowing my Marines and I will be their eyes in the sky and making a direct impact on operations. 

Anyway, out of about 50 people (mostly Captains), I was one of two women.  Out of the whole brief, she was the only one they teased when she stood up to speak.  She handled it well, though.  I felt like a lot of eyes were on me, though: the new kid and a female.  Well, it does feel more like war out here.  The only road on the “base” is also the runway (only helos), and LAV’s, tanks, and big trucks abound and the remaining space is populated with tents, little wooden “houses,” and Marines everywhere else.   I am part of history here, for sure. I am excited and nervous.  In a way, I don’t have a lot of responsibility – I’ll be more of a “floater” than anything else – but I will keep busy and the overall operation will be big.  If we are successful it will be very big toward a free Iraq.  I think Jamey Warner will be in harm’s way and I pray for him.  Also, a Cobra was shot down in Ramadi today; I pray for the pilots’ families. 
Enough for tonight…22:00 now and up at 0:600…

Monday, November 14, 2011

MEMORANDUM: Reasons for wanting to switch from AFROTC to NROTC as a Marine Option


* I found another gem among my archives :)  So, after I received the warning letter from my father (posted on the blog last week), I waited one week, then 9/11 happened, and the next day, I gave this official letter to the Wing Commander of the Air Force Det, an USAF Colonel.  I'm aware that I sound like a tool....but be aware that I was a 20 year old "moto-kitty" as we used to say  :-)  ;-p







MEMORANDUM FOR COL Axxxxxxx                                                                                  12 SEPT 01
FROM:                  Sarah Pxxxxxx
SUBJECT:             Reasons for wanting to switch from AFROTC to NROTC as a Marine Option


1.       My military career goals have become less Air Force oriented and increasingly more focused on the Marine Corps environment and job opportunities.
2.       The Marine Corps offers the specific internal and external opportunities and challenges I seek in a military career.  It fulfills my personal expectations as well as my desire for physically demanding conditions in a work environment.

a.       The Air Force will not teach me the specifics of ground warfare tactics, which highly interests me in a career path.  The Marine Corps, on the other hand, focuses on this subject in depth.  Furthermore, I will be able t practice and actively participate in these tactics.

b.      The training I can receive from the Marine Corps during and after college will put me in an intense physical and outdoors environment upon which I thrive.  In nits nature, such an environment is more prevalent in the Marine Corps than in the Air Force.

c.       The most physically demanding and challenging careers paths in the Air Force (Pararescue Jumpers and Combat Controllers) are not open to women.  And while I am aware woman cannot hold infantry positions in the Marine Corps, I would receive more demanding and physically challenging training for years even before attending MOS school with the Marine Corps than anything available in the Air Force.

3.       I have observed all the services, and the Marine Corps is simply a more appealing setting for the condition in which I would like my mind and body in my career.  The Marine Corps stresses physical fitness and emphasizes strict regulations on appearances both on and off the job.  The Marine Corps cultivates a bond among its people that is undeniable strong, unique, and admirable.  I want to be a part of that.  I prefer to work in an atmosphere where I will have more demanded of me and where I will be pushed to my limits.  Unfortunately, I no longer feel confident that the Air Force can provide such an environment, either in college or while on active duty.  The Marine Corps offers me a setting in which to test myself both mentally and physically while simultaneously rewarding me with the satisfaction of knowing I am one of the “few, the proud.”

4.       Ultimately, the Marine Corps possesses all the intangibles I desire most.

Friday, November 11, 2011

My Touchstone: Dear Sarah part 2 - An Explanation

Mom, me, Becci, Dad: 2003

This entry is less of a response and more of an explanation of the multi-layered ironies my father's letter contained.  If you care to get part of the rest of the story, please read on. :)
---> see my responses (hope the red font is readable!)

Dear Sarah                                                                          Sept 4, 2001  *Dated one week before 9/11.
My father and I regularly exchanged emails that were more in the style of old-fashioned letter writing, heavy on contemplative thought and expressive emotion, and less of the modern-day bullet-point emails; the following letter was a combo of the two.  It wasn’t as emotive because he was (obviously) focused on trying to drive a point home.  He gave me solicited and unsolicited advice, which regardless of the type, I always welcomed.  Even though our relationship had been strained – seemingly beyond repair – my junior and senior years of high school, we were back to our old selves again by the time I went to college.  Additionally, I was the only one, the youngest in fact, of his four children who followed in his footsteps and joined the military.  Even as a grown woman, I felt like a little girl at times to sit and listen to his stories about the military, and I assume he felt similar satisfaction in being able to finally share those stories with a willingly captive audience.  Moreover, I planned to fly – kind of like him (he was a navigator).  As if we didn’t have enough to talk about already with coinciding interests in sports, nature, and life philosophy, from 1999 onward, we had the Air Force and flying. 

A few things I’d like for you to think about: 1.The USMC Major says you need a current PFT.  Can you do that in your condition?  There’s a difference, right? 
Since it was September, I was back in Charlottesville to begin my third year of college. I’d spent the previous two summers working at Henderson Hall Marine Corps Base in Arlington Virginia where my days were consumed by running five to twelve miles every morning at 6:00am (after an hour drive in from the suburbs), lifting in the base weight room at lunch, and swimming 800-1600 meters in the afternoon.  I would have taken crack cocaine, too, to further perfect my physique had I listened to the advice of one of my fellow lifeguards. During the months I worked at the pool the summer of 2001, I trained even harder since Air Force Field Training (FT) was then within immediate sight.  But I made the classic young athlete's mistake and over-trained.  I was fixated on finishing #1 at FT and knew physical fitness was one component of that success I could control.
Two days into FT, I tore my left hamstring while running up the stairs - a moment that changed the course of my life.  Because of that injury, I had to leave Field Training before completing it.  I would only later realize that my incompletion would be the technicality loophole that allowed me to switch ROTC programs.   
The injury itself was debilitating. I couldn’t walk properly for weeks, let alone run, sitting hurt, standing hurt, and it forever altered my stride to where I needed physical therapy for years to come.  Other than having already broken both arms and legs, of which all the fractures healed without complication, I hadn’t had any of the nagging knee or hip problems that a lot of female soccer players were plagued with.  Tearing my hamstring threw everything off balance; but being twenty and obstinate (as the two often go together), I’d convinced myself I was in running shape again weeks after the snap.  Furthermore, if I really wanted to make the switch from AF to Marine Corps, I had to be ready to run. 
In order to accomplish a perfect score on a Marine Corps PFT (Physical Fitness Test), a woman had to do the flexed arm hang for 70 seconds, complete 100 crunches, and run three miles in 21 minutes; a male had to perform 20 dead hang pull ups, complete 100 crunches, and run three miles in 18 minutes.  Passing required lesser scores.  I was sure I could at least pass.
2. Does a flight contract guarantee pilot or just any type of flying job? 
Yes. In the Marines, you could sign a contract as a pilot if you so desired and if you met certain requirements.  It guaranteed you a spot at flight school, not success there.  What I didn’t have the balls to tell my dad yet, though, was that even if I didn’t end up flying, I would rather be in the Marine Corps than the Air Force. 
3. I wouldn’t stir up any more with the AFROTC than necessary before you know this is what you are going to do.  That is, will USMC pay and is that important to you?  PFT? 
I did know this was what I was going to do.  Even now, as a thirty year old woman who has – forgive the trite but true saying – seen the world, I still harken back to that decision as the most doubtless one I’ve ever made. It’s been my touchstone for a decade.
I wasn’t so resolute to go Marines because it made sense.  In fact, it made no sense at all!  As a college student dependent upon my government scholarship, I was told that if I really tried to complete the switch, I would be unable to.  [At this point, I think everyone thought I was bluffing.]  Furthermore, it would be considered a breach of my contract with the Air Force, therefore I would be kicked out of school, forced to enlist (in the AF), and would have to pay everything back that the AF previously shelled out toward my education.
I continued my petition.  The Colonel (both my dad as you see in question #3 above, and the ROTC Detachment Commanding Officer) humored me.  “Let’s say you do switch, how are you going to pay for school?”  The Marines didn’t offer three, two, and one year scholarships like the Air Force did.  Either you came in committed to the program from day one or you didn’t.    

Other options had to be explored.  I was already daily engaged with the Marine Corps ROTC Major on all of these matters, as well.  He suggested formally joining Navy ROTC (which had available scholarships), then applying for an MO (Marine Option) spot.  No, I decided it was too risky to end up in the Navy if something fell through. 
“Well, there is Platoon Leaders Course,” Major Pfeiffer mentioned.  That program, which was funded by a slightly different pot of money, entailed much less commitment than full ROTC, yet offered the same financial benefit.  But the Air Force Det Commander told me, “You’re not taking the easy way out.  If you switch to the Marines, you have to still do ROTC whether you take PLC money or not.”
Either way, none of the decisions could be made quickly, so I had to cover all my bases in the meantime.  That semester I wore my Air Force ROTC uniform to Navy/Marine ROTC’s morning Leadership Laboratory (aka: Lead Lab), went to my regular classes for the day, then attended Air Force ROTC’s afternoon Lead Lab.  On Wednesdays I went to Air Science class; on Thursdays I went to Naval Science class.  Monday, Wednesday, and Friday mornings at 0600, I PT’d (aka: worked out) with the Marines.  Thursday mornings, I attended Air Force’s Mando (aka: work out).  Tuesday and Thursday afternoons, I had soccer practice, with games (sometimes traveling) on the weekends.  I also decided to double major in Religious Studies and took a 22 hour course load toward that goal.  Oh, and in case I lost my scholarship and/or didn’t get a new one, I began working part time at a local golf shop to make a little extra money.    The entire semester passed this way.

4. I remind you of what you said to me about the enlisted airmen you met at Shaw vs those Marines you met at Henderson Hall…These are the type of folks you have to get to do the job when you become their officer boss.  It may not seem so big now, but it will be your life as a manager, flyer, etc.  Convincing me that my life would be easier in the AF than the Marine Corps didn’t sway me.  Surely it would be easier to manage highly motivated, intelligent young men and women who lived in Air Force dorms (not barracks) and ate at cafeterias (not chow halls), but when you want to be a Marine, and when you already feel a kinship with them, it’s hard to explain to someone that you want to be one of those misfits.  The fact that most Marines are a little bit – or a lot a bit – crazy was an appeal, not a deterrent.  Most Marines embody the “work hard play hard” mentality, and so while they often appeared as screw-ups in their personal lives, for the most part, they could flip the switch to “on” when they were at work.  As my journey into the Corps progressed, I found I had way more in common with the Marines than I ever did with the Airmen.

5.  You must plan for what happens when you are not flying.  Even if you get a slot, then pass all, all, phases of the training, you will eventually be given other duty.  What will that be?  Where will it be?  What does each service have to offer that interests you for these other duties?  The USMC is about ground attack, you will never lead troops in a ground attack (thank God) and that will limit you whether you believe it or not. 
As previously mentioned in #2, the fact was that if I didn’t end up flying, I only saw myself as a support paper-pusher in the Air Force.  I would be a civilian in a blue uniform.  If I did not become a pilot in the Marine Corps, I would still be a Marine.  Also, the Marines had nearly all the same opportunities as the Air Force – attaché duty, language school, ROTC instructor, etc – just in smaller quantities.  If I was interested in those duties later, I assumed it would only be a matter of me making up my mind to do it, and I could.

6. I know peer influence is far greater than parental influence, but I have been through many years of military service.  I’ve been around all the services.  I take the Air Force hands down, and I want only the best for you.  I will never say I agree with you becoming a Marine.  I KNOW the Air Force is a better, more rewarding life.  You can believe all you want that you can make it in the macho world of the Marines, that you can make them accept you…You will never be a man, you will never be as mean, nasty, tough, strong, etc.  The Marines are built on that concept for a reason.  It does not matter what they say to be politically correct.  They have to believe they are meaner, nastier, and tougher than the enemy bastard whose throat they have to slit on a dark night.  We need people like that.  Maybe you can do that, maybe you want to do that, but no high school dropout, weighing 210 pounds with an IQ of 90 is ever going to believe that.  I’m sorry if this sounds cruel or perhaps wrong to you, but I know it is true.  Should you have the right to prove yourself?  Yes.  Will you? I doubt it.  PFTs are not Iwo Jima’s beach where you have a 60lb pack on your back, the water is chest high, the surf is pounding in your face, bullets are whistling around you head, mortars are blowing your unit into hamburger, and you have to turn and say “follow me.”  I know you want to fly and all this death and destruction is far less personal, unless of course you are shot down and taken prisoner (if you survive the crash).  Hopefully you will never have to fight a war, but you are joining (either AF or USMC) to do that if called upon.  It’s about believing you are right so much that you are willing to do whatever is necessary to win.  To kill someone else face-to-face or with a bomb.  Decide you can do it.  Decide you convince others to do it. 
Wow, #6 is heavy! ;)  I’ll take it one piece at a time…
Like I mentioned, my AF superiors and my dad thought I was bluffing.  They thought since I’d spent the last couple of summers hanging out with Marines at Henderson Hall and the school years PT’ing with the ROTC MO’s, that I only wanted to do it because my friends were doing it or because it was “cool.” At that point, the MO’s weren’t my friends, though; Kate was the only person I knew well, and the others were still an untouchable enigma to me.  To my parents it looked like a clear case of peer pressure.  To me, the friends were a bonus, not the onus for my pull to the Marines. 
My Dad kept his word – he never told me he agreed with me being a Marine – but he has since told me he is proud of me.  When I later faced some of the injustices he predicted, the “I told you so, now quit being a tough Marine and come home” platitudes colored his advice. Even when clouded by chaos during some of those situations, I lucidly disregarded my parents’ advice, followed my gut yet again, and although avoided no pain whatsoever by doing so, was glad I’d followed my own path. And there’s a subtle difference in those two sentiments that permeates some of our conversations to this day.  My dad was maybe the closest to understanding my decision to go into the Marines – my mother was adamantly against it, and by all accounts, I guess you could say after reading this letter, so was my father – but no one in my family inherently understood why I was doing it.  Five years later, they didn’t understand why I chose to stay in after my second (and a heinous one at that)  deployment.  Since the initial decision never resonated with them, how could it have in 2007 either?  I wasn’t mad at them for urging me to get out.  I understood why they felt the way they did, but I didn’t agree.
Should I have the opportunity to prove myself?  Will I? Did I?  I finished number two in my Platoon and in the top 10% of the Company at OCS.  (For the record the girl who finished .01% ahead of me did not accept her commission, thus, technically I think I finished #1 ;)  ).  Despite appearances to many of my peers at TBS, I finished well among our class. I asked my SPC if I could attend IOC; a handful of pilots every class were allowed to go even though they wouldn’t be Infantry Officers.  Why couldn’t I? I’d completed every hike and outscored most of the men on all the physical events.  To my knowledge, no woman had ever gone to IOC before and I wanted to be the first.   Had I been healthy, without two broken bones in my left foot (which had been broken for five out of the six months of TBS), he’d worked a deal to where I’d be allowed to go.   Later, once I was in the fleet, I made it a goal to run a 300 (perfect score) male PFT before I left the Corps; I did.  I was ranked in the top 10% by several of my RO’s.  Despite being lambasted with lies and almost literally physically forced onto a plane to go home early during my second deployment, I requested Mast with a  revered Wing CG and stayed in Iraq another two months, declining the offer to be home with my family for Thanksgiving and Christmas. With a year left on my second contract, I was asked to be the first female Marine Counter-intelligence Officer at a flagship class in Dam Neck.  I declined, recognizing that ego for being first wasn’t enough of a reason to do something, but was deeply honored by the invitation.  Aside from all that, and most importantly, I remember every friendship formed that otherwise would have gone unborn, every mentor who guided me, every enlisted Marine that ever told me I was a good leader to th or that I changed their life for the better, and every female Marine who’d never previously had a female Officer-In-Charge (OIC) who thanked me for being an example to emulate.  
“Hopefully you will never have to fight a war.”  No explanation is required to highlight the significance here.  As we know, the garrison Corps would return to its fighting roots and become cemented into a decade long war in two countries. 
Have I killed anyone face to face?  No.  Have I seen real time videos of battlefield death and destruction? Yes.  Have I called in artillery fire to be dropped on real live men?  Yes.  Did it look like a video game?  Yes.  But did I know it was real? Yes.  Was I ever watching a video feed of a school we thought was occupied only by insurgents, with attack Cobra helicopters inbound, T-1, when all of a sudden a group of women and children emerged into the courtyard?  Yes.   Have I been forced to watch beheading videos?  Yes.  Did they give me nightmares? Yes.  Have we guided Prowlers onto a target or Cobras with Hellfire missiles and played “whack-a-mole” on flat screens in a COC and laughed?  Yes.  Did I have an emotional hangover when I returned to my barracks room later that day? Yes.  I chose this profession, though, and I can acknowledge the atrocities without demeaning my choice. 

7. About flying.  I know from first-hand experience that just wanting to be a pilot isn’t enough.   I was smart, I was tough, I had more desire than most, but I didn’t have enough of whatever to make it.  I wasn’t a bad person or a failure because of it, but I had to find a different job.  So don’t ignore this.  I’m not trying to jinx you, but you are not being fair to yourself if you don’t think about the options.   Oooooh the multiple layers of irony present here in this one little paragraph! J   This is an entire story in and of itself, so I’ll just tell you all that I did not end up flying in the Marine Corps.
 8.  Also, remember landing on an aircraft carrier is one of the most challenging things in the business.  Perhaps you can do it, but you are raising the odds of failure.  (This is about technical analysis of a career, not rah rah, bust your ass, you can do it.)  Again, I didn’t end up flying, so I don’t have a lot to say about this for now J

9. Yes, you will always be my daughter and I will always love you.  I will accept your decision, but I will never tell you that the Marines are better for you than the Air Force.  It’s more than the fact that I was in the Air Force, too.  I have no doubt the Air Force will be everything you are seeking in the military, and more.  You will meet quality people, you will lead enlisted people who are brighter and more enlightened.  You will have greater variety of jobs, respected jobs, from which to choose.  You will travel; you will have one remote tour in a career (maybe), not sea duty every 4 or 5 years.  You will have command opportunities in and out of airplanes.  You will have something of an uphill fight in any service because you are a woman.  Don’t kid yourself.  It isn’t right but it is true.  You will be a minority.  People will respect you for your intelligence more in the Air Force. 
Intellect, respect, and quality of life are a matter of perspective.  By “normal” peoples’ standards, my quality of life would have been better in the Air Force, but it was not (as my father insisted) everything I sought in the military and more.  It was like being in a relationship where you were happy, but felt like something was missing.  The Air Force was like a nice boyfriend, one with whom I could be happy, but one who didn’t challenge me on a deeper level….and especially at twenty years old, I craved a challenge.

The Marines were better for me because living my life as a part of that institution (vice AF) provided an avenue through which I would NOT live my life full of regret.  I knew then, and maintain now, that I would’ve spent my life asking what if, or thinking I could’ve if I hadn’t put it all on the line and gone for it.  My Marine Corps years contained the worst tragedies of my life, yet I would not change my decision to join the Corps to this day.  It wasn’t a choice like having to pick between two colleges (for example).  Generally speaking, no matter where someone goes to school, they’ll learn a lot, do well in life, etc.  Yes, the specifics turn out a little different depending on where you go, but the general picture is the same – you emerge a college graduate with friends, boyfriends, memories, etc.  At this crossroad, though, I irrevocably altered my life path.  To non-military types, maybe you think it’s the same as the difference in schools, majors, or where you chose to live; but I think some of you will grasp the gravity of the decision I made.  For those of you who know what I then went through in the following years, you really get it.  And I’ll admit that I’m proud to say that I made it through everything and in the big picture now have myself a really good life.  I emerged from that fog physically and mentally stronger than I EVER could have been otherwise, and on my own terms.  The refining fires of my faith and my service forged me into the person I am today. 
Well, I have to go and you probably got pissed at this letter long ago.  I hope this isn’t too late.  I want you to stay in the Air Force.  I wasn’t pissed.  And I smile every time I read this letter. J  Halfway through the second semester of my third year, the paperwork came through.  The switch could be realized…and from that day forward, all letters such as this “ceased and desisted” forever more! ;)
I love you.  Dad
I love you too, Dad.
I think they were proud of me after all ;)