Operation Enduring Freedom Cosplay

The interwebs are all abuzz with news from Comic-Con, where it seems everybody gets to have fun dressing up as their favorite character.  I play dress-up every day here at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan, but my costume isn’t much fun.

Let’s work from the feet on up:

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These are my summer-weight boots. If you’ve followed me from the beginning, you know how fussy I am about my boots! Although this footwear is feather-light with lots of breathable fabric, it still feels like I’m wearing ovens on my feet.

That thing tucked into the laces on my left boot? One of my dog tags (I wear the other around my neck). I’ve had several people ask me why I put the tag in my left boot. Picking a tag foot was something I actually spent some time pondering. I have a small red birthmark on the third toe of my right foot (which you can see in this blog post), so if my right foot/leg gets blown off the chances are good it can be identified as mine by the birthmark. That’s why the tag is in the left boot — I want that dismembered limb reunited with the rest of me. These are the things you have to think about in a war zone that would never cross your mind anyplace else.

Boots are a big deal here, and having ill-fitting boots can make you miserable. My coworker Darryl is 6’5″ and a mountain of a man, and he’s on his feet all day doing construction management and inspections. He wears out boots quickly and he’s had a devil of a time finding big enough boots that fit right. Finally, after months of limping around in uniform boots that fit all wrong, he got himself an exception to policy so he could wear boots that fit, even though they don’t match his uniform:

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Those big red boats are lumberjack boots, and Darryl is in heaven! He jokes that somewhere out there Ronald McDonald is going barefoot…

My trousers have cargo pockets all over the place, and I’ve learned how to pack those pockets in the most optimal way for myself.  The pocket on my right calf contains my tourniquet:

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Almost everybody carries one, and many people carry two (one in a leg pocket, one in a sleeve pocket).  Most people also write their blood type on the red tab, but I don’t.  My hope is that if I ever have to use it, it will be on somebody else and I don’t want my blood type confusing the medical staff.  With all the Indirect Fire (IDF) attacks here, there is a lot of shrapnel flying around and several people have been seriously injured, so I always carry my tourniquet.

The pocket on my right thigh is where I keep my camera, sunglasses, cell phone, pedometer and fan.  I have several fans and I’m not shy about fanning my sweaty, broiling self when the air conditioning is not adequate to keep me comfortable. Seriously, check out this forecast:

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Totally uncalled-for.

I don’t put anything in my left-side cargo pockets except my hat.  I’ve learned that sometimes you are in a crowded place and the IDF alarm goes off (INCOMING-INCOMING-INCOMING), and when you hit the floor there might not be enough room to lay flat on your belly among all the other people, so you have to lay on your side. I leave my left side pockets clear so I can lay on my left side comfortably (without hard, pointy things poking into me) in crowded places under attack. Again, things you don’t think about except when you’re in a war zone.

On my upper body I wear a plain Desert Sand colored t-shirt, on top of which I wear this rather heavy blouse:

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The patch with my last name and the patch identifying me as a Department of Defense civilian are stitched in brown, which means I work for the Air Force (even though I’m assigned to the Army Garrison here). If the stitching on those patches were black, that would mean I’m an Army employee.

The triangle that says “US” is a placeholder — if I were military, that spot would show my rank. When I first got here, I noticed a lot of people approaching me on the walkways were staring at my chest all the time and it was creepy and uncomfortable. Then I realized they were trying to figure out my rank. Military members walking around outside have to salute higher-ranking personnel, and it’s sometimes difficult to tell the rank until you’re very close. It didn’t help that my lanyard often hung in the way and obscured my “rank”. Now I try to make it as obvious as possible from as far away as possible that I don’t need to be saluted.

Like the trousers, the blouse is very layer-y with lots of pockets and double-fabric reinforced areas.  These garments are not very breathable, so I’m roasting most of the time wearing this uniform in the heat of summer.

The patches you wear on your sleeves identify your nationality, unit(s), and mission.  On my right arm, the flag shows that I’m an American (click here to find out why it’s “backwards”) and the round patch identifies me as falling under the 966th Air Expeditionary Squadron (the Air Force unit charged with keeping tabs on all us Air Force personnel regardless of the unit to which we’re assigned):

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On my left sleeve, the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) patch says I’m here for their mission, and the patch with the mountains, guns, and sword tells people I work for the US Army Garrison:

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I wear a lanyard around my neck with a pouch that carries my ID card, emergency phone list, and debit card:

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Like I mentioned above, I tuck the pouch into my blouse pocket so the troops approaching me on the sidewalk can tell I’m not someone to salute.  To top everything off, I get my choice of patrol cap or boonie hat (neither of which does my hairdo any favors):

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I wear the boonie hat in the summer not only because of the sun protection but because summer is the season for the “100 Days of Wind”. It’s very dusty and gusty, and the boonie hat has a strap so I have some hope of keeping it on my head when the winds start howling.

So, that’s how I get into costume for my job here in Afghanistan. I call it “my costume” not to mock the military members who serve in uniform, but because I’m a civilian and I really do feel like I’m playing dress-up. Wearing the uniform causes people to show me respect I feel I haven’t earned because I haven’t made the commitment the military members have made, nor am I expected to make the sacrifices that may be required of them.

On the other hand, the IDFs don’t discriminate when they come flying in. I have to hit the deck and make my way to the bunkers with everybody else, military and civilian alike. We’ve had a lot of IDF action over the last couple of days due to Eid al-Fitr: apparently one way insurgents like to celebrate the end of Ramadan is to shoot rockets at Bagram Airfield. I can think of better party games than that, just like I can think of more comfortable clothes to wear to work — but nobody is asking for my opinion.

Eid Mubarak!

MM

Hiking in Portugal, Belonging in Afghanistan

I spent my last week of R&R (Rest & Relaxation leave) in Portugal hiking the coast:

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Most of the hiking was by the sea, but there were a few inland excursions:

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Oh, and I hiked my boots to death:

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They disintegrated nearly simultaneously on the last hiking day.  I’ve had these Lowas for 10 years and many, many happy miles.  Miraculously, the duct tape held until we reached the hotel.

I was hiking with an adventure tour company I’d vacationed with in the past.  We had 14 hikers and three guides who rotated driving (2 drivers/day) and hiking (1 guide/day) duties.  Like with previous tours of this type, the itinerary, activities, scenery, lodging, and food were outstanding.  But unlike with previous tours, we didn’t hike as a group.  It was every man for himself on the trail.  I didn’t care for it.

We had some pretty aggressive speed-hikers mixed with some bird-watchers, flower-peepers, photographers, and other medium- and slower-paced hikers.  To my chagrin, the other hikers quickly formed trail cliques and each went at their own speed, without regard for the day’s schedule, the other hikers, or the ability of the guide to keep tabs on us.  As the day wore on, the guide would have to run increasingly faster and farther up and down the trail to count noses as the distance increased between the speedy and slower hikers.  Every now and then I would start to catch up to a group or a guide, and they’d see me, but they’d often go on down the trail without waiting for me to join them. I made it known to the guides and other hikers that I wanted to hike with a group, but I guess they all figured that some other group would pick me up.  None did.

Alas, I ended up hiking alone most of the time.  I’d never been on a group hike where the participants and guides didn’t try to maintain group cohesion and where the members of the group took little to no interest in contributing to the benefit of anybody outside their own small circle.  I was confused most of the time: my fellow travelers were chatty at breakfast and chummy at dinner and polite but unapologetic as they abandoned me on the trail.  So were we friends or weren’t we?  Strangers on the trail and friends everywhere else?  What was going on?

After repeated episodes of being merrily deserted without so much as a backward glance, I couldn’t shake off the creeping feeling that there was something wrong with me.  Why did the group keep breaking up?  Was my desire to stick together realistic or an artifact from my months in a war zone where we all faithfully kept watch on each other?  Wasn’t it unsafe to not have a buddy system in the wilderness (especially when we were hiking in heavy brush on forking trails with low visibility)?  Did I have warped expectations of what this trip should be?  Was I unlikable or pitiable or not cool enough for these people?

It’s too easy to get sucked into that self-questioning shame spiral when you spend many solitary hours and miles on the trail.  Actively hating on yourself pretty much every waking minute takes a lot of energy.  While it’s a terrible way to treat yourself, the good news is that you really can’t keep up that level of paranoia and self-loathing for very long.  Or at least I can’t.  About three and a half days into this odyssey, I concluded that there wasn’t a damn thing wrong with wanting to hike as a group, and the participants who couldn’t be bothered to help make the trip fun and safe for all were selfish.

I got a lot happier when I stopped trying to make a connection with these people who included me one minute and excluded me the next.  I wasn’t mean or spiteful or angry, I just politely but unapologetically disengaged when it was clear I wasn’t getting a satisfactory return on my friendliness investment.  Instead, I read or worked on my computer or popped in my earbuds and listened to my iPod.  Oddly, people who ditched me every day on the trail gave me dirty looks and showed other indications that they did not approve of my failure to socialize.  Seems it was ok by these folks if I was alone because they abandoned me, but it was not ok for me to be alone on my own terms.  There’s a psychology paper in there somewhere.

Anyway, I finished out the week doing my own thing on the hikes and other activities.  I enjoyed the company for what it was in the moment, without any expectations (of them or myself) for what it might be in the next moment.  To my delight, on the last hike of the last day the guide gave the speed-hikers a GPS and sent them on their way, then led the rest of us on a hike as a group.  It was a treat to have the birders and flower-lovers pointing out and identifying what was flying or blooming along our route, and to be able to ask the guide about local landmarks and history.  When the soles of my hiking boots started to separate, it was a fellow hiker’s duct tape that patched them up.  This is what I’d wanted the whole trip.  It felt good.

But I’m no sucker: these people were not my friends and I knew it.  We smiled and hugged and parted ways, and I came back to Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan, happy with my break overall, though with a touch of lingering self-doubt about what I’d expected and experienced during the hiking tour.

That self-doubt was squashed in short order.  When I described how I had spent so much time hiking alone, my coworkers were outraged.  When I explained that I seemed to be the only person on the trip who had a problem with the hiking format, and that perhaps it was too needy of me to expect to be among a group with a guide on this trip, these ideas were immediately dismissed as preposterous.  To a man, they all said the same thing: a group hike means hiking with a group, the leader is responsible for keeping the group together, and the group members are responsible to one another.  And you don’t need gung-ho military leave-no-man-behind training to know that you don’t allow somebody to hike alone on the trail: it’s just common sense.

It was such a huge relief for me to hear this; even though I knew it deep down, I really needed to hear it from some other people.  I would never have guessed in a million years I’d have to leave the “real world” and come back to this wild war zone (the nuttiest place I’ve ever been) for a sanity check.  You could knock me over with a feather.

Postscript

Recently at lunch I sat down at a table with four men from my office who were just finishing up.  I told them to go on and not wait for me.  They didn’t budge.  They stayed and chatted and when I finished my lunch we all got up and left together.  Did they stay because they’re gung-ho military leave-no-man-behind (even in the dining hall) guys?  No.  They stayed because sometimes you suffer a little bit of inconvenience for the sake of including others. I love these guys, my wingmen.  It was nothing to them but it meant the world to me that they would wait so we could walk back to the office together.  As a group.

MM

The Most Hated Boots in Bagram

Two weeks of footwear hell is finally over!

When I was issued uniform pieces at my home station, I got Air Force boots — sage-colored, water-resistant, basic combat boots.  I wore them during Combat Airman Skills Training and got them good and broken-in.  They were comfortable, I was happy.

Then when I got to the Transit Center at Manas, Kyrgyzstan, I wore my sage boots for a couple of days with no problems only to find out the night before my flight to Bagram, Afghanistan, that my boots were unacceptable because they were sage-colored and not desert tan.  Because I was wearing OCPs (Operation Enduring Freedom Camouflage Pattern, also known as Multi-Cams), I had to have desert tan boots, no exceptions.

So, my comfy sage-colored boots were taken away and I was issued boots in a color that would allow me to appear in the combat theatre without embarrassing myself or the United States military.  Except these proper-colored boots were the evilest boots ever manufactured.  Here they are:

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They look innocent enough but do not be fooled.  Like much else that came out of Manas during my brief stay there, these boots are Cruel and Unnecessary with a side of just plain awful.  I cannot adequately describe how loathsome and despicable these boots are, even though they look great with OCPs.  The soles are so thick (over 1.5 inches!) and stiff it’s like they’re made of concrete.  Speaking of concrete, they weigh 2.25 pounds APIECE!  Every step is an effort and every walk, no matter how short, is a death march in these beasts.  And they don’t breathe, so your feet roast all day.

I’m sure they’re the pinnacle of tactical footwear technology, but they made my life miserable and my knees hurt and my ankles sore and my feet sweaty for 14 long days.  I dreamed vivid, exquisitely detailed dreams of burning these boots, of burying them in deep pits, of throwing them over the fence into minefields.  I imagined them ripped apart by wild dogs.  No fate was too cruel for these horrible boots!

Then I was saved!

Behold, new boots (ordered online and delivered fast!):

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They’re lightweight and flexible and breathable and comfortable!  I have energy again!  I’m willing to go places now!  I feel like dancing!  And, unlike the evil boots, they’re quick to get on and off — they have a zipper!  They’re such a welcome relief from my previous foot torture devices that I don’t even care that there’s so much padding around the tops that they make me look like I have cankles!

It’s amazing what a difference good footwear makes.  Since my boots are no longer exhausting me every day, I can finally catch up on my blogging!

MM