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

Meet My Peeps: Ms. Diann

My favorite person at Bagram Air Field is an experienced deployer (Kosovo, Iraq, and here) who keeps me on the straight and narrow.  She sent me great advice emails before I left home, and since I’ve gotten here she’s been a valuable resource for information about everything from how to find my way around the base to how to get the best deals at the bazaars.

The other night we went to the local spa, she for a manicure and I for a pedicure:

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As you can see, she doesn’t care to have her picture taken.  And my attempts to trick her into looking toward me while I’m holding a camera are always foiled:

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Camera-shy is the only kind of shy she can be accused of.  You know how you need people in your life who will call you out when you need to be set right?  When you’re messing up or deluding yourself or not seeing the whole picture?  Ms. Diann is that person for me — a no-nonsense straight-shooter.  She can deliver a one-line zinger so sharp you’d swear it will leave a mark, but she doesn’t have a malicious bone in her body.  She just tells it like it is.

Example:  we’re walking to the DFAC for lunch one day and we pass by the Airman’s Attic.  She tells me it’s a “thrift store” where you can turn in uniform pieces that don’t fit anymore and replace them with other sizes if you gain or lose weight.  I’ve dropped a few pounds since I arrived and my trousers are getting a little baggy, so I say, “I might have to go in there and get some smaller pants if I keep losing weight!”  Without missing a beat she shoots a look at my ass and says, “You got a ways to go.”

KA-POW!

You can’t get mad at her:  she’s always right!  If I ever need the unvarnished truth, she’s the oracle I consult.  We have a lot of fun together, and I’m so glad she’s taken me under her wing.  And I’ve discovered if I’m very patient, and always keep my camera in my pocket, I might catch her in a rare, camera-ready mood:

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Note the nice manicure.

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

Transit Center at Manas, Kyrgyzstan

Transitioning into Afghanistan means stopping at Manas for gear, briefings, and abuse.

It took about 24 hours of travel time to get here from Baltimore, including two stops lasting a couple hours each along the way.  It was tough sleeping on the plane, and sleeping in the gate lounges during stops was impossible, so we arrived tired and bleary-eyed.

Those with a rank of E4 or lower were ordered off the plane first and made to stand in formation in sub-freezing temperatures while the rest of us deplaned and immediately boarded busses.  Many standing on the tarmac did not have hats or gloves or even proper coats.  These poor souls were slated to unload the abundant luggage from the plane onto trucks.  It seemed cruel and unnecessary to make them stand and wait while the rest of us deplaned; they could have been allowed to stay on the plane until we were gone.

But, Cruel and Unnecessary seems to be the motto here at the Transit Center at Manas.

We were bused to the PERSCO area and ordered to leave all our bags and other belongings (purses included) in a large tent while we attended a briefing in the building nearby.  The briefing was performed at lightening speed by several persons whose only aim was to get through the briefing as fast as humanly possible, with no care or concern for the fact that they went so fast nobody could get the info from the slides.  We were told to make sure we were writing down the information, but most people had left their pens and paper with their bags in the tent across the street.  A couple of the briefers were reading lists of names and appeared downright illiterate as they were unable to pronounce common names.  The whole debacle looked like it was performed by people who had never done any of this before, as if the war had started just that morning rather than a decade ago and they were doing this transition briefing for the very first time.  What a mess!

One of the goals here at the Transit Center at Manas is to make sure arriving personnel DO NOT transition into their new time zones smoothly.  Appointments for briefings and gear issue are commonly set for 10 pm or 1 am.  Tomorrow, I’ll be doing a “bag drag” at 4:30 am.  Cruel and Unnecessary.

Maybe the folks who work here are bitter that they are stuck in a place so ugly, so they take it out on us transients.  Check out the view:

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This is the main drag.  Those windowless buildings on the right side of the road are dorms.  They don’t do windows here for security reasons (also why they don’t allow any bags into any public or office buildings).

Here’s a closer look at a dorm building:

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I believe these are constructed of stacked shipping containers.  The staff stationed here get to stay in these luxury accommodations, while we transients are stuck in tents.  My tent area is called the Hotel Alaska:

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Each tent holds about 50 people and untold numbers of mice (the vermin population is pretty active — as I type this there is a mouse running along the rail of my “headboard” right behind my computer).  Here’s my tent a little closer up:

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Here’s a shot of the inside:

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Of course, en suite bathrooms are unheard of, so we get to hike across the gravel to the latrine and shower trailers.  They are cramped and not very clean because so much dirt and mud gets tracked in:

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The toilet stalls are constructed to be very shallow, i.e. you cannot close the door if you are standing in front of the toilet (you have to straddle the potty).  Similarly, you can’t sit with the door closed unless you adopt the wide stance made famous (infamous?) by Senator Larry Craig.

Other highlights include the Fitness Center:

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The Chapel:

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The Dining Facility (or DFAC):

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The local coffee joint:

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And an alternative to the DFAC:

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There you have it, the glamor of world travel and adventure courtesy of the United States Armed Forces.  Next stop: Afghanistan!

MM