Meet My GREECE Peeps!

In stark contrast to my disappointing experience in Portugal last spring, my September R&R to Greece was fantastic because of the people! The trip guides set an upbeat tone and wrangled 13 of us hikers from (and back to) Athens around four islands through four hotels via three ferries, a private boat, a flight, and countless busses on a tight schedule, all while remaining energetic, patient, and accommodating, and showing not a hint of exasperation or exhaustion!

I’d like to give a big shout out to my trip-mates, whose lively and delightful company made every day a party:

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The group! front row L-R: Steve, Tami, George; second row: Noreen, D-, Sheri, Linda, Bill; third row seated: Arne, Jill, Kara, Toby; standing: guides Maria and Christos

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Guides Christos and Maria give us the island overview for the day’s hiking

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Guide Maria dressed for the city instead of the trail

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Maria and hiker Kara take a pause on the trail

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Kara being epic

Sheri

Sheri on the trail

Bill

Bill takes a break on the trail into Oia, Santorini

Tami and Toby

Mom and son: Tami and Toby

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Gotcha, Toby!

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Tami checks out Kouros parts

Noreen and Steve

Noreen and Steve

Steve and group

Steve kept the group in stitches most days!

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Noreen strikes a pose

Jill and Noreen

Jill and Noreen enjoy lunch al fresco

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Jill at dinner

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Sister and brother Jill and Arne at the summit

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Arne on a through-town hike

Christos shopping

Christos shopping in Santorini

George

George soaking up the Santorini sun

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George on the town

Linda

Linda on the beach

Bill and Melissa

Bill and me

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Group dinner

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The group on Santorini

After a rough summer at BAF I needed a really good R&R, and thanks to the beauty of Greece, the marvelous weather, and the company of these lovely people, I got one! I was thoroughly relaxed and re-energized upon my return. Whenever I need to de-stress, I look at my trip photos or even just reflect on one of our meals or hikes or other events and I get a great big smile on my face.

I miss you all! Take care, be safe, keep in touch, and I hope to see you again someday!

MM

You Can’t Make This Stuff Up

It’s springtime in Bagram, Afghanistan, when young men’s fancies turn to… erm… lube.  And making money.

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This instant classic comes from Nakslist, our local e-commerce source.  You may recall a Nakslist employment opportunity for an Egg Peeler shared in a previous blog post.  I don’t even know where to begin with this, so I’m just going to free-associate:

Restricted lube sales by the Dixie-cup:  crazy or genius?  I don’t know which way to go.

Swiss Navy?  Never heard of it.  Do the Swiss even have a navy?  Last time I checked, Switzerland was land-locked.

“Bacon bazooka”:  I have no words.

Lube for everyone!

MM

In Case You Weren’t Aware of Our Bad-Assery…

On a military base in Afghanistan, when you don’t carry a gun or wear unit insignia that identifies you as a stone cold killing machine, you have to find some other way to communicate to the world that you are no one to be trifled with.  So, you make up a wicked scary patch:

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I can neither confirm nor deny that we Department of Public Works (DPW) employees are trained to kill the enemy using a Number 2 pencil.  That’s classified.

Believe me when I tell you that we can put the hurt on anybody in ways you don’t even want to think about.  Just a few of the areas we control in full or in part: food service; access to non-tactical vehicles, electrical power and water supply; trash removal and wastewater services; housing and office space assignments; placement of defensive T-walls and bunkers; fire and emergency services; entry to and exit from the base; roads and facilities operations and maintenance; service contract oversight.

So, yeah, you probably don’t want to mess with the people who provide your meals, living quarters, and hot showers.  Regardless of whether we’re wearing a patch featuring a black skull with glowing red eyes or just the bone-tired expression of people working 12+ hour days trying to keep this base from falling apart.

MM

Fugly is the New Normal

Scenery that made me wince at its sheer ugliness when I first arrived two months ago is now so ordinary that I don’t even notice it anymore.

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I’ve slid into a funk over the last couple of weeks.  The dreariness of the routine and the surroundings has been weighing on me.  So, I told myself to stop tuning out and to look around, pay attention, find something to appreciate and get excited about:

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Hmm.  Easier said than done.  Better look somewhere else:

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Uhhhh…

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Erm….

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Ok, what about over there?

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Yeaaaaahhhh.  Wow.

Ok, Melissa, try looking through your art gallery glasses…

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Note how the masterful draping of sniper screen conceals the fence, and yet, at the same time, reveals it!  The fringe of ancient plastic on the barbed wire stands in strong juxtaposition to the assertive pops of blaze orange and the saucy red stripes on the yellow bollard.  The artist’s fury and hilarity are aggressively in your face, serving to distract the casual viewer from what the contemplative observer discovers upon careful study: despair.  And dust.

Oh, looky!  Sunshine sparkling on concertina wire:

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Pretty!

Hey, check out the awesome progress on the construction project in front of the Garrison building:

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(Tilting head and squinting)

(More tilt, more squint)

Ok, this isn’t working.  Face it, Bagram Air Field is one very ugly military installation.  But, we’re here to win a war not a beauty contest so I guess I’d better stop hoping for my surroundings to provide inspiration and start finding ways to love the ugly — like people do with those creepy hairless cats.

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Cat photo credit: petslittle.com

But I digress…

Ok, ratcheting expectations way down.  Down farther.  Little more… that’s it… keep going…

… and, we’ve arrived here:

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See how the port-a-john siding perfectly matches the sky?  Niiiiice.

MM

Love Notes from Strangers

Care packages full of goodies and toiletries and magazines from schools and clubs and individuals are awesome, but the notes they put inside thanking us for our service are my very favorite things to get.

Little kid notes and artwork go right up on the wall in my office:

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So cute, right?  Adorableness is not something we see a lot of around here, so these notes always make me smile.

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No, Tristian, I don’t know your dad, but every time I see a soldier or airman with the name tag “Brown” I think of you!

Notes from veterans are always very special:

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Seeing these veteran notes reminds me that my ability to volunteer for this assignment is due to the sacrifices of people who came before me and fought for my country’s freedom.  I’m so fortunate and so grateful.

It’s great when people leave an email address, so I can send a thank you note!  I send thank you post cards if they include a mailing address.

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Notes with coffee are always a big hit:

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Any note of heartfelt appreciation is like getting a big hug:

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The best item I’ve gotten in a care package to date:  Estee Lauder bronzer!  I had no idea how much I missed make-up and other girly things until I saw that little compact of magic color!

Most unexpected care package item that I didn’t know I had to have until I saw it:  disposable chopsticks from a take-out diner.  They’re in my desk drawer in their paper wrapper waiting for a special occasion when I can use them at the DFAC.  I’m very excited to be able to eat a future meal with chopsticks!  (Yes, it really is that boring here.)

Note that made me laugh the loudest:

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No, Daniel, YOU’RE a real hero!  You and everybody else who goes to the time, trouble, and expense of sending treats and good wishes to people you’ve never met.  These love notes from home get us through the long, dark days.  Thank you so very much!

MM

The Honeymoon is Over

Or:  Kick Me!  I’m a Dog!

That shiny idealism I’ve been sporting since my arrival here has developed an ugly tarnish.  I thought a project I inherited from my predecessor had been reviewed and approved by The Powers That Be here in Bagram, to include my organization and all the other stakeholder organizations.  The way it was presented to me, everybody knew the plan and was on board.  What could possibly go wrong?

Standing on the snow in the cold, bright sunlight of a Bagram morning recently, I was surprised to suddenly find myself on the receiving end of an aggressive and accusatory dressing-down by a certain military service member.  To protect his anonymity, I’ll call him “Major Wedgie”.  Major Wedgie verbally tore me apart in front of Everybody’s Big Boss – let’s call him “The General” – and his entourage and my chain of command for failing to know what he knew about the project, which was entirely different than what I had been briefed and thought I knew.  I had no satisfactory answers for Major Wedgie, who seemed to get a real charge out of shredding me in front of The General.

As a fun bonus, when The General asked who is “the dog who gets kicked” over this project going forward, the  non-response from my chain of command prompted me to raise my hand and say, “Me, sir.”  Brilliant.  (Another New Year’s Resolution: never miss an opportunity to keep your mouth shut, dumbass!)

Back at the office, I’m trying to reconcile what I heard from Major Wedgie and my organization during The General’s project site tour with what I was briefed on this project when I first arrived at BAF.  It’s not like everything was super wonderful on this project before Major Wedgie came along:  I was becoming ever more irritated by the people who declined to participate in the planning stages of the project (and tried to make me feel bad or stupid or small for even considering such a waste of their time) and then were complaining about how the project was executed incorrectly because it wasn’t properly coordinated with all the stakeholders during planning.  Seriously?  Show up or shut up, people.  (New Realization:  I’ve been the dog who gets kicked all along!)

The day after the ugly scene in front of The General, Major Wedgie himself came to the Garrison to discuss the project design with my boss.  The Environmental Chief/Official Dog Who Gets Kicked Over This Specific Project was not invited to participate in this discussion and didn’t even know about it until it was over.  Hmmmm.  Perhaps here is a clue as to why I am not informed about what everybody else seems to know.

I’ve experienced several low points, annoyances, insults, and disappointments over the last couple of weeks, so I’m not really the poster child for job satisfaction right now.  In fact, I don’t much like myself these days with how useless I feel in this position, which is making me grumpy and snappish.  Plus I’m questioning everything I thought I knew to do here, which is exhausting.  I’m feeling the tug of a downward spiral.  Not good.

Despite these frustrations and the sting of embarrassment at being made a fool of in front of my chain of command, I am going to redouble my efforts to move forward and not let myself get depressed.  Like many other deployers I’ve talked to, I’m at just about the right number of weeks into my service here for a standard-issue existential crisis:  Why am I here?  Can I do any good?  When is the next plane to America?  I am told this is normal and will wear off, but I’m having trouble seeing the light at the end of this particular tunnel.

Must.  Push.  On.

So go ahead and kick me, General.  And you also, Major Wedgie.  If making a public spectacle out of humiliating a relatively new civilian (who has been working hard in good faith while you’ve withheld relevant project information) is your way of demonstrating military leadership, it’s pretty clear who’s a dog in this situation.  You can bite me, too.

MM

Happy New 2014!

New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day are special here at Bagram Air Field.  We have happy greetings from Sad Skinny Santa (obviously modeled on the same guy who posed for the Santa in He Sees You When You’re Sleeping…)

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And steaks at the Dining Facility (DFAC) (you know it’s steak day when you see and smell the smoke from the DFAC barbecues where they slow cook the beef)

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And rocket attacks.  (Sorry, no photos.)  Because the insurgents like to bomb us on our holidays.  So we spent lots of time staggering around in our body armor and helmets, and hitting the ground when the sirens went off.

When I’m face down on the ground with my arms covering my head while I’m waiting for the explosion or the all clear signal, I think about my fellow trainees in Combat Airman Skills Training (CAST).  I so admired the apparent ease with which they ran and jumped and accomplished all kinds of difficult and time-sensitive tasks with all their armor and weapons and other gear, while I was slow and clumsy and sometimes needed help getting up because I wasn’t strong enough to pick up myself and all my gear.  I worry about them during these attacks because even the ablest of them can’t outrun a rocket.  I pray for their safety, and for the safety of all the other people out there on BAF and the other Afghanistan bases.  I never really appreciated how comfortable and safe and easy and carefree my life was in America, how I could just walk around assuming I was in no danger; now I’m reminded every time I hear the sirens.

There are lots of people here who’ve done multiple deployments and are totally blasé about these attacks.  I’m not one of those people: rocket attacks are scary as hell and they kill people.  One of my New Year’s Resolutions is to not take my safety and health for granted, and to be more mindful of how lucky I am that (when I’m not deployed) I live in a place that isn’t a war zone.

Happy New Year!  Stay safe, everybody!

MM Defender

MM

He Sees You When You’re Sleeping…

… which isn’t much because I can’t close my eyes and NOT see this face:

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This frightening apparition is one of the many styrofoam sculptures used to decorate the Dining Facilities (DFACs) here at Bagram Airfield during the Christmas holiday season.  For the most part, the decorations are cheerful, but this particular Santa nearly made me drop my lunch tray when I first rounded the corner and came face-to-face with him, then haunted my dreams for a good while thereafter.

They go all-out with Christmas decor.  DFAC exteriors are adorned with inflatables:

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Inside, we see Christmas trees…

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(here’s one of my co-workers at the Garrison)

Snowmen…

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(along with a guy I see at the DFAC every morning)

Nativity scenes…

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And all kinds of goodies dangling from the ceiling:

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At one of the DFACs, Santa appears ready to take flight with his reindeer…

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…while on the other side of the dining room, Mrs. Claus sits alone with what looks like a 40 of malt liquor:

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Ok, not your typical Christmas scene, but the DFAC employees are largely Muslim and Indian contractors so maybe they’re not fully equipped to provide the American Christmas Experience.  They’ve sure mastered food sculptures, though, and fancy baked goods:

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I hope you’ve enjoyed this taste of a Bagram Christmas!

MM

A Very Garrison Christmas

The US Army Garrison Leadership at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan, wishes you and your family a very merry and safe Christmas!

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L-R: Mr. Andre Douglas, Deputy Garrison Commander; Col. Chris “Sam” Houston, Garrison Commander; and Command Sergeant Major Paul Bianco

Somebody got us a real tree!  We decorated with some “real” ornaments, then used what we had lying around for the rest: shell casings, computer mice, handmade creations, oddball objects from care packages, garlands of styrofoam packing peanuts and Lucky Charms cereal.  Turned out pretty darned nice!

MM

IT WAS ON HIS CHEST!!!!!!!

Man Versus Beast: Bagram Edition

Let’s just get right to it, shall we?

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In my opinion, there are not nearly enough exclamation points in that matter-of-fact description of the events that took place on 5 December 2013.

IT! WAS! ON! HIS! CHEST!

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I don’t know what kind of snake it was, but we have been told these snakes are venomous and they bite!

Unanswered questions:  Did the soldier in question wet himself?  Regardless of the wetting or not wetting, will he receive a medal?  A promotion?  An Army Post named in his honor?  Are they going to make him a hat band out of that snake?  Is he a hero among his peers for surviving the snake attack or because he will now get more nookie for this than all his buddies combined?  Alas, the report was too brief.

MM