Sunday, October 28, 2007

A Tale of Soap and Coming Home

I didn’t know it was a game at first. The first time I played was probably back at the dorms at the University of Arizona. Just participated out of laziness and opportunity. It took two years of honing my skills to realize the their full potential but now I’m quite certain I’m a pro. The game, soap swap, the premise, be retarded enough to forget your body wash in the communal showers in a densely populated area long enough to where you know it will be missing if you go back to look for it, then find a new bottle of forgotten soap before your next shower so you never actually run out and you never buy a new bottle. The rules are simple. You can’t use bar soap, because that’s fucking gross, who knows what part of what body it’s touched. Also you can’t take a bottle that belongs to a person you know is still in the bathroom. That would just be mean, and it would increase the rate of half-naked fistfights that are already too frequent an occurrence.

That’s pretty much it. It’s not really stealing because it’s just accepted that if you forget your body wash in the shower it’s going to become part of the game. It’s really the same as anything that is left unattended in community housing, if you don’t love it enough to keep a constant eye on it, it was never really yours to begin with. So far this has been the fate of my pair of $130 Smith sunglasses and countless unmarked tan undershirts. Why do people take other peoples intimate clothing? Who knows, but I remember that even the issue tighty-tanny panties weren’t beyond the realm of possible targets in basic. They say the Army hates a thief but they certainly don’t mind employing them. I’ve learned a multitude of handy less than legal tricks from my fellow soldiers over the last year and a half. You’d be surprised how easy it is to steal a car and probably less surprised at how easy it is to get caught. Every time an aspiring thief falls short of his goals, a new private is born.

--

Kuwait blows. The end.

--

I’ll never fly again with out the aid of modern medicine. As we taxied to take off from Kuwait heading for our half-way point in Frankfurt, Germany I took a couple muscle relaxers and passed out before the wheels left the tarmac. I awoke to a small dish of strangely delicious meat chunks with rice and veggies in front of me and ate mindlessly until my plate was clean and promptly passed out before the stewardess took my tray. I woke up again to the sudden jarring of our plane touching ground and passed our two-hour lay over eating a bratwurst and chatting with my friends about how much we enjoyed walking outside and actually feeling cold.

As we were getting seated again I took an Ambien and racked out before we were in the air. Somewhere over the Atlantic I woke up and ate a cheeseburger and the next thing I remember we were 45 minutes out of Newark, New Jersey. I can’t think of a better way to spend almost an entire day inside a plane. I was rested, relaxed, and in generally good spirits even while sitting waiting for hundreds of soldiers to get off the plane before me. As we disembarked for our second and last layover we were told to under no circumstances take our weapons off the plane. After the seven layers of Customs that we went through just to get on the damn thing we were all pretty happy to just leave our shit on the plane so we could go shave and brush our teeth. Being one of the last ones off I ended up getting left to brush my pearlies using the water fountain. Apparently some soldiers found this taboo, the same men who spent weeks wearing the same clothes out at the patrol bases. Go figure.


From New Jersey to North Carolina I tried to sleep some more but I guess my body’s limit is somewhere around 18 hours so I watched an episode of House and fiddled with my beret picking little pieces of white fuzz of and trying to smooth out the wrinkles. Outside my little window we floated above lush juicy white clouds. It was like standing upside down and looking at Heaven below you. Every so often a break in the clover would reveal green fields and trees, well-maintained roads, and a tiny shiny cars moving all the busy people to and fro. It was like peering through the shifting mist of the wishing glass, six months in a place like Iraq can make even the most mundane American countryside seem unimaginable.

I got butterflies as we landed at Pope AFB and taxied around to an ecstatic crowd of waiting family and friends. No one was there to see me in particular but just being around all that happiness finds a way to get to you. Fathers seeing their baby for the first time, lovers reunited, mothers getting to hold their son that they’ve worried about endlessly over the last year, it seemed like all way right again in the little world of Stephen. People I’ve never met before hugged me like I was kin. Women cried on my shoulder. I was thanked countless times for my service and I found it was impossible to erase the smile I’d had since we were released from formation. And now I’m home. Hopefully my stories from here on will ones of joy and music, more chances to get all I’ve yet to do accomplished.

Saturday, September 29, 2007

Know what would be awesome sause?

....If I could sleep. But I can't so I updated my profile, messeged a few peoples and checked my gmail about 7 times to see if anyone had written me, but no one had.

...If people I write would write me back. I mean I know I'm not the center of the Universe, my mother told me so, but isn't is just common courtesy to return correspondence? Even if it's just a quick IOU-a-real-letter letter, that would be better than nothing. It just kind of makes me feel not so loved.

It's 4:22 in the morning and I'm still in Iraq. It still is sandy outside. I would enjoy a hug and one day where no one around me is a sarcastic burnt out soldier just counting the days until they go home. That would be awesome sause.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

It's a war about nothing, get it!?

Wielding an imagination as expansive as mine has grown to be can sometimes make even the simplest task seem incredibly daunting. I can’t just sit in a humvee and stare into space. I can’t just feel a certain way about something or someone. I have to dig, I’ve got to know why I feel the way I do. I’ve been digging into death since the first time I was directly involved with taking another mans life. I couldn’t just let him be dead, which would have been the simplest if not most healthy solution. I created a world where I could see each bullet pass through his skin in the slowest motion possible and continue through his insides destroying tissue, causing chaos where there had once been beautiful order. I stood there in the dark long after my real body had jumped into the rear of a Blackhawk and flown away. I watched over him as he took his last breaths, as be became another AP statistic, or more accurately as he turned into nothing at all, the butt of a joke told by men in brand new uniforms creeping through his country in the night with glowing green eyes.

He became a son and sometimes a father. He transformed into a farmer or perhaps the owner of a small shop. He was poor, that much doesn’t take any leap of faith to believe. He was afraid of us, so much so that when he heard the sound of our helicopters heading toward his home he fled into a nearby field and hid himself in a canal thick with tall dry reeds. He knew he was guilty of something that we would arrest him for, that he would be taken away somewhere far from his family perhaps for a very long time. Maybe he was a bad person. He may have been a rapist and a thief, a murderer, or he may have just been another sucker tricked into working for a group whose ideology he cared nothing about, maybe he was hungry, maybe he had no options. He had hopes and dreams and memories built from an entire life of consciousness, and all it took after a few short moments of violent action was a few moments more for the vacuum of time to fill in the space where he had once been.

Shortly after that night I was looking through a pile of confiscated items that had been piled on the floor of our tent. In it was a Sony Handi-cam Hi8 camcorder. You don’t see a lot of consumer electronics in the smaller towns in this region so it seemed out of place among the dirty AK-47 magazines and small pamphlets of Arabic writing. I picked it up and pressed the power button. To my surprise it started up and an image came to life on the small fold out monitor. The video was poor quality in comparison to the high definition I’ve grown used to, the colors highly saturated and grainy. Still it was clear enough to show two men blind folded on there knees with their hands tied behind their backs. They had been placed outside near a thick low hanging tree, the scene looked like a hundred places I’ve been in this country, sun baked reddish soil, everything sad and wilting in the mid day heat. Through the small speaker I could hear the voices of men speaking Arabic quickly, it’s replication distant and metallic, distorted by gusts of wind that occasionally overwhelmed the cameras small microphone.

I’d seen videos like this on the Internet before. I knew these men were going to die but for some reason I had to see it for myself as if to prove that I could tell the future. The unseen men’s voices became louder and more excited but the men blindfolded kneeling did not move. Their expressions never changed. They must have known what was in store for them. I wondered what it must feel like to know you’re about to die a violent and painful death. I felt that if I had been in the same position I would have resisted but I’ve seen enough of these scenarios to know how things go, eventually one just accepts that they have no choice or that’s what they make themselves believe.

In the middle of this thought two assault rifles were thrust into the picture and a moment later two fingers pulled two triggers, fire erupted from two muzzles behind a score of invisible unthinking unfeeling machined pieces of copper and steel. It’s not like Hollywood. There’s no spray of blood, bullet wounds sometimes bleed very little even minutes after they are inflicted. The body tightens in an automatic response to the trauma and falls forward following the force of the impact, the mouth pulls back in a grimace and that’s it. I turned the camera off.

I usually don’t talk about this part of my job when people ask me what it’s like here. People just don’t understand. They ask me questions like whether or not I think I have the right to choose what lives and dies. I had to think about it for a while before I had a good answer. I think I got defensive and ended up saying something like, “well, if I brought you over here and set you loose on the street in one of these towns we don’t have a firm control on and you were captured, you’d be beaten, raped, held for ransom and eventually beheaded or shot. It’s not like I just arbitrarily fire on randoms. Mistakes happen, but we have a good system in place to decide who’s ‘good’ and ‘bad’.”

If you think about the transverse who says a doctor has the right to keep someone on life support when they should naturally be dead? Doctors are given a guide to follow and based on their expertise in their field they make judgment calls using their knowledge and experience. A soldier does the same. The reason these morally ambiguous questions are still debated is because there is no black and white divide between right and wrong. Like marching in the earliest minutes of dawn we spend our days traveling through and working within continuously changing spectrum of grey.

Regardless of what the news would like to make it seem like, we are in fact professionals. Not in the sense that we’d all know how to tie a full Windsor but we are pretty damn good at what it is we do.

---

Some missions absolutely nothing happens. So what do you write about? Seinfeld made millions on a show about nothing so the trick must be to find the something within the nothing. That’s what I thought anyway as I was laying face toward the stars atop a thick and brightly patterned sleeping mat I’d “appropriated” from the inside of the house we had taken over for our last two day outing. Looking at so many stars it occurred to me that I really don’t know much of shit about anything. I know a little about everything but not a lot about anything. Like I know that the light that we see from a star was actually emitted hundreds of thousands of years ago and it’s a possibility that that star no longer even exists, but I don’t know what the speed of light is or how I’d possibly be able to calculate the distance from Earth to a star or it’s approximate age as determined by it’s size and the spectrum of light it emits. Somebody out there knows that. I know that thousands of years ago some dudes got together and started telling stories using uniquely shaped patterns of stars to create characters filling in the gaps as to how these characters interacted. I know what Orion’s Belt looks like but that’s about the only one I could pick out aside from the ladle to which there is no pot grand enough. Someone out there knows them all.

I blew through a 600-page novel by the evening of the second day and I thought that finishing a good book is like breaking up with a girlfriend you really like just because you have to move away. It’s so frustrating. You feel like there should be more but you just have to accept that it’s over and move on. There’re other books in the sea, you tell yourself, but still you can’t help but think about your old book. You want to pick your book up and hold it in your hands and relive all the memories. But you realize that story’s already been told, those pages have been turned, your book is probably captivating a new set of eyes by now, spine folded all the way back, revealing all the same secrets you once thought were only yours to see. Dejected, you look for anything to get your mind on other subjects. A few cheap, easy magazines later you finally get over the worst of the pain and start looking for other ways to entertain myself as if that old book were just another work of fiction.

Some soldiers develop a razor sharp weapons grade sense of humor after enduring the mind numbing boredom and repetition of the cycle of guard duty, patrols, and convoys. You get by, by making light of how bad it can be. We talked about the state of the region after a year of our being and how the bad guys just move from one town to another and back as we focus our attention elsewhere. One soldier said it was like watching a stupid person play ping-pong by himself. The ball just falls off the other side of the table and every time he goes on a wild goose chase through a huge cluttered room to find the ball and by the time he grabs it and switches sides he’s forgotten what the score is. It’s not all funny stories and bitching though.

Some of the guys here have fallen into a twisted and sick worldview that is all but encouraged by these circumstances we find ourselves in. Labeling something an “Iraqi-something” somehow strips it of all worth much in the way I believe the Nazi’s slowly stripped away the humanity of Germany’s Jewish citizens. I’ve watched men not just kill but torture wild and domesticated animals out of nothing more than plain boredom. I don’t see why it’s so hard to make the correlation that for the locals a chicken is more than just a cartoon on the outside of a carton of eggs among a stack of hundreds at the local mega-market, it’s a food source that has to be cultivated and cared for over time and it means a lot to them. It makes me sick. Luckily I’m not the only one who feels this way but still these things continues to happen. I’d get into the particulars of the story but I really don’t want to type it all out. What I did find odd was one of the men involved, a man several ranks and years my elder, after I voiced the obvious wrongness of his actions, came up to me and tried to assuage his (modest) feelings of guilt by explaining that it was just an “Iraqi Pigeon” and there for the dirtiest and most worthless creature on Earth capable only of spreading disease.

I replied, “Sergeant, human beings are a disease upon this planet that have so far shown an almost limitless capacity to take without giving back. That by definition is a parasite. Until today that pigeon lived within natures system of checks and balances that we have chosen to disconnect ourselves from. So really who’s more worthless?” I believe also I used the transitive form of “fuck” occasionally for emPHAsis. I didn’t look at him while I said this because I was trying to look busy reading and because I didn’t really feel like giving him that respect.

To try and make my point I retold a story of a day when I was in my early teens and my friend and I were sitting by the window of his second story bedroom. We’d been shooting birds from out translucent hide for hours; this was a regular thing for us then. You give young boys pellet guns and what do you expect they are going to do with them, at least we weren’t shooting each other… that day. By then we’d decimated the regulars and so had to wait extended periods of time for more migratory prey to enter our kill zone. Looking out across the yard I was scanning the branches of a scrubby coastal oak when my eye caught a tiny abnormality. I might have missed it had it not fluttered its wings just as I passed over its position. It was a tiny green humming bird surveying its territory with obvious pleasure as it let out inordinately loud chirps for its size. I laughed and told my friend I bet he couldn’t hit it, from that distance of maybe 40 meters it looked like a hyperactive bumblebee; I figured it was an impossible shot. He took my bet and as he took aim I smiled and got ready to gloat, as I believed his failure was eminent. His tongue was sticking slightly out the front of his mouth as it always did when he was concentrating or wrestling and he slowed his breathing down to steady the plastic stock of the rifle on the top of the windowsill. Pop! The gun recoiled slightly and he looked above the iron sight to see what had happened. For a moment the bird didn’t move and I readied my barrage of insults but a third of the way through the word, “pussy” the humming birds tiny body fell from the branch and behind the tall gate that marked the end of the back yard.

I was stunned. Literally I couldn’t move. I couldn’t believe he hit it. Neither of us said a word, we dropped out guns and ran down stars to see if we could find the body of our felled quarry. After a few minutes of searching in a patch of ivy at the base of the oak tree I came across what looked like a winged emerald splayed out on the ground. There was a small hole between its shoulders but not much blood; I guessed a humming bird didn’t have much to lose in the first place. We both stared at the tiny bird for a period of time that I couldn’t really recall, it could have been 30 seconds or 15 minutes and it seemed that without saying a word. Silently something clicked that had never occurred to us before. We stopped shooting birds after that day and since then I haven’t had any interest in hunting. I think maybe it took killing something that we considered not only benign but also beautiful and somehow undeserving to teach us that he really weren’t gaining anything from what we were taking. Some people it seems never learn this. I didn’t think the story would change his mind but at least he knew where I stood and maybe it would change his behavior in my presence anyway.

---

The days are starting to cool off gradually. By this I mean I don’t fear for my life when I walk outside during daylight hours. It’s one of those things where you think, hey if it was like this all the time this place wouldn’t be so bad. But it’s not like this all the time, soon it will start getting cold, or rather the temperature will start fluctuating so widely that it will seem cold at night, then it really will get cold, but we should be gone by then (extend our tour again Mr. President, I dare you).

Thursday, August 9, 2007

Oh I have a war story to tell...

Here things go from boring to real damn interesting in the blink of an eye. We got a frago last night, which is a mission order on short notice that we would be going up to Anbuhkia (not spelled correctly) to make contact with the local nationals to snoop around and see what the friendly situation was looking like. This village is one of the last Shia Muslim strongholds in the region and in return for our aid and protection they offer us valuable information on what kind of insurgent activity is going on. In keeping with my fine military training I promptly fell asleep as our convoy exited Warhorse just after 7 AM. I woke up maybe ten minutes later to the humvee swerving around a string of huge holes where deep buried IEDs had either recently been detonated or unluckily stumbled upon. It occurred to me briefly that this wasn’t a very safe place and I thought that it was kind of odd that only upon having seen the actual results of what an IED can do did I consciously make the connection that my job was not particularly normal or safe. I popped in a couple breakfast pistachios and made believe they were an order of French toast with a side of bacon.

As we rolled into the village we stopped and dismounted in front of a “school” where absolutely no education looked to be taking place. The chickens pecking the earth in the front courtyard looked happy enough so it wasn’t a total waste of space. The usual gaggle of underemployed onlookers clustered around the gate facing where our Captain and interpreter were talking to one of the town elders and one of them kept eying me with a confused crooked toothed grin. I’ve heard there is a good deal of inbreeding in this area because of the level of poverty and remoteness of the small villages and if that is true it certainly shows in the faces of some of the people we come in contact with. I haven’t figured out yet how a place can produce some of the most beautiful young women I’ve ever seen right along side with the most awkwardly homely vacant eyed males. I do know why they hide their daughters once they reach their early teens though.

After coming to the conclusion, with the aid of an almost empty stomach, that I’ve officially grown tired of Iraqi youth and the “hey mistah” game I took out some of my boredom and frustration on a group of boys that kept inching toward where I was standing. It’s nice that only having to slightly raise your voice and your rifle can get such an immediate and decisive response. Force speaks volumes in any language. Left alone again I drifted back into scanning mode and looked around at the different roof tops, walls and fields around me and considered how 30% casualty rates are an accepted reality of waging war in an urban environment. Then I thought about pistachios because they make me happy and I decided that life is like a pile pistachio shells on the top of my aid bag in a moving vehicle. Without my guiding hand there to constantly control my pile of life, it would slowly but inevitably scatter and fall into chaos. Luckily before I wandered too far down that little road we were called to hop back into the trucks and follow a man who had given us a lead to another part of town.

Another group of men trying to look important and about 45 minutes later we rolled out again further north to attempt to fix a dam that the locals told us was broken as a way to show we were thankful for the information and support. The Iraqi police said that a dishka (also not spelled correctly) had been sighted in that area as well so we’d be on the look out for that too. A dishka is a Russian .50 caliber anti-aircraft gun that the insurgents use as an anti-vehicle/personnel weapon. They usually mount them on the back of a light truck (bongo truck) so they are highly mobile and deadly in capable hands. Most of us thought this was going to be a wild goose chase as we drove and drove through fields of grass and tall weeds. I fell asleep again.

I woke up as we were turning left onto another dirt road. To our right was a small field and beyond that a cluster of buildings. Our platoon sergeant (who graduated from the same high school as me, oddly enough) said something over the com like “who’s taking contact?” and immediately the present and now had my full and undivided attention. The specialist in the .50 cal gun turret turned toward the buildings like putting on a pair of sunglasses as you step outside, I put my earplugs in. To our right I could hear Ak-47s popping off but I couldn’t see where it was coming from. I found out later that a group of Iraqi Police had accompanied us and had the unfortunate luck to have positioned themselves between our .50 cal’s and the incoming fire. Our whole convoy exploded with gunfire. Incoming rounds whizzed and popped over our truck as I readied new boxes of ammunition for the gun. Times like these seem to grant me the most singular clarity. I don’t feel fear or anxiety I just put my trust in the guys around me and focus on the task at hand which at the moment was getting the fuck out of the perfect L shaped ambush that we had rolled directly into.

Here’s what happened according all the different stories I’ve pieced together. As I was sitting in blissful unconsciousness we had driven through a small town. We figure people in the town alerted the insurgents that we were coming if it wasn’t already obvious enough by the huge plume of dust being kicked up by our convoy. They had set up in some previously dug out fighting positions and waited for us to come. The odd part about it is that once we were there we were taking contact from our right, left and front but the IP had walked diagonally through the field to our left without stirring up any trouble. The question remains unanswered but what is for certain is that the dishka in question did in fact appear directly in front of us and scared the shit out of the IP who made a hasty retreat on our left flank. I don’t really blame them. Their vehicles are unarmored and they usually don’t wear body armor. Our forward observer said that he saw one of them get cut almost in half by just one dishka round. I’d have run too. In fact that’s essentially just what we did.

We started rolling backwards towards the road we had turned off while still engaging to our front and right. There was a three story building with a hide emplaced on the roof where we thought some of the fire had been coming from so our gunner opened up on it. I never saw a single person from where I was sitting so all I could do was make sure a fresh box of ammo was ready when our gunner needed it and hope that he didn’t get it by one of the bullets that I could hear going by us. We eventually got our truck turned around and continued our retreat.

My driver turned around and said “OK, here’s the situation, Golf 1 has been hit in the arm so get ready, we’re going to go back to that small village and have you take a look at him.” I had no idea who Golf 1 was but it didn’t really matter at that point, it was one of my guys and I figured it was a gunners since they were the most exposed. I ran over a few scenarios of possible extremity injuries and how to treat them and hoped it was a relatively small 7.62mm round and not the .50 cal, which would have probably taken his whole arm off. The whole situation sucked and had one of our guys not gotten hit I would have loved to wait around and watch an Apache level the whole block but as it was I had other things to worry about. Looking back on it I think we did a lot of things wrong and though I’m glad more people didn’t get hurt it makes me mad that we just left and now that gun is still at large and that fighting position is still mostly intact.

Three IP ran in front of our truck and we slowed down so they could jump on our hood. One of them looked hurt but I couldn’t see and obvious wound from my seat and they looked to be holding on all right. They looked scared. I wondered what’s in it for them to do a job that makes them a combatant without an army. Once we got to the village I hoped out of the humvee and the casualty was brought to me. I’d put my gloves on en route so I went right to work accessing the situation. Adrenaline does amazing things to people. The soldier had put a tourniquet, a pressure dressing, and an ace wrap on himself and already completely stopped the arterial bleeding. He was alert and elated that he had had so many confirmed kills even after being hit. The wound already taken care of I made sure he didn’t have any head trauma and wasn’t going into shock and started an IV line with morphine to help with the pain I knew was going to come once he came down off his rush.

We put him in the truck with me and I had him tell me what happened partly to help keep his mind off the wound and partly because I really wanted to know. He told me that he had been engaging the bongo truck with the mounted dishka directly in front of his truck when the round went through his wrist and pulled his sleeve back. Our interpreter handed him the tourniquet and bandages he fixed himself, reloaded and went right back to firing on the dismounted enemies he had identified. These are the kinds of stories medals come from, from guys who are this country’s true warriors. I hope he gets recognized for doing a dangerous job so exceptionally well.

15 minutes into the ride back to Warhorse reality started to set in and he began to realize how badly his arm hurt. Tourniquets have an accumulative effect with pain, the longer they are on the more they hurt. All I could do was give him some more medication and hold his hand and talk to him about how nice it must be to be a war hero who gets to go home while the rest of us are stuck here. Aside from getting the Forrest Gump million dollar shot in the ass, the wrist is a pretty lucky wound. He could still feel his fingers and I saw him move them a little so he’ll more than likely make a full recovery. Right before we got to base it was starting to become difficult for him to do anything but grab my hand and repeat things like “wow, you have no idea how much this hurts.” I followed along with him to the aid station and into the OR where I gave all the important information pertaining to the wound and medication given to the doctor in charge. The chaplain was there to talk with him and help keep his spirits up but I doubt there was much anyone could say at that point to help as the doctors took his bandages off to put a hemostatic dressing on. His whole body shivered in agony and I held his legs has he tried his hardest not to scream through the oxygen mask over his mouth. Right then a 1st Sergeant told me my Platoon Sergeant was waiting for me so I said goodbye and that I’d keep the casualty’s stuff safe, grabbed my bag, and ran out the door to the humvee waiting for me. The mission always continues.

So I know now first hand that we have a lot of work to do here. Do I want to stay here? Hell no. Do I think pulling our troops out now would be a really bad idea? Definitely. There you have it, from the horse’s mouth. Not CNN or Fox News, no profit margins or motives involved. This place is messed up and we are the only thing keeping any sense of order. It’s all pretty sad really, knowing that I’m a part of the problem and the solution. We gave the militant Muslim movement it’s fuel and it’s martyrs, consolidated it’s forces, drew lines in the sand to instigate conflict, armed it and set it free on the world and now we sit here playing referee to an age old divide between Shia and Sunni, rich and poor, east and west and it blows. Sometimes I wish I could go back and put down all the books, turn off the TV and just believe that the world was a good place to wake up to where I could drink my cold sparkling apple juice and worry about things like making the teams even for the neighborhoods nightly game of cops and robbers. Before I had to play the cop for real and the pointed fingers turned into pointed rifles. You can’t ever go back, but pistachios can make a decent breakfast.

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Alcohol

I read Esquire. It's just another bullet point on the long list of un-military activity that I participate in on the daily but I'm not ashamed of it. I envision for myself a future of upper-middle class comfort where I'll be able to indulge in fast cars (probably rented), nice suits (that I won't have much occasion to wear), and of course fine expensive liquer. The mixing of these three is always a guaranteed recipe for hilarity, but if for some horrible reason I was ever forced to choose just one from the list, I'd have to follow my heart and my liver to the drink.

Alcohol is illegal in Kuwait, as it is in Iraq and of course my natural perpensity toward the contrary is begging my better judgement to find some sort of underground hooch network here on base where shampoo bottles are filled with bathtub gin and you need a password to open the tent flap. I've heard alcoholism runs in my family but I like to believe that I drink not because of some genetic defect but rather because drinking makes me a famous super hero with sexy chiseled abs and large offshore bank accounts. Reality is dictated by perception, right? I enjoy my reality on the rocks.

Anyway the reason I mentioned Esquire as a prelude to my libational confession is because they do a "Best Bars in America" feature every year and as I was laying on my cot in my white tent reading about bars that I'd actually been to I came to the conclusion that the only thing that rivals my love of music is my love of drinking with my friends. But I fucking hate going to the bars. They are too loud, too full of retards, and I always feel short in them. I don't why bars are the only place where I become self conscious of my height but it pisses me off just the same. It seems to me that these feelings aren't indicative of the bar experience as a whole but rather because the local bar scenes in the towns I've lived in have been either based around obnoxious college age drunkards or obnoxious middle aged affluent drunkards and the bars themselves focused too much on squeazing every last cent out of plastic sheathed well rum and cokes and not on the atmosphere of what made the public house of so many years ago a welcoming meeting place for the tired and thirsty masses.

I guess the only thing to do is build a bar from scratch that won't suck. Here's what my bar will feature:

A well trained and friendly staff. They don't have to be super models but men and women who know how to make a real drink. I figure I'll have to snag some from a larger city or start off staffing the bar myself until things are running the way I'd like.

No TV's. I don't care about sports and I want my bar to be a place to talk and meet people not to drool and stare into the corner at a Berry Bonds fat ass.

A free or cheap jukebox with good music. My definition of good is fucking good.

A small area for live music. People have forgotten the power of live music inclosed areas and alcohol, it's an awesome trio. I will use my contacts which still remain to get good artists to come play and I'll treat them right.

These will be the basics. As for design ideas and implimentation I'll be thinking while I'm not drinking. When I get home I'll be doing some heavy research to find out exactly what do and don't want in my bar... this of course will have to be done in the field.

Thursday, June 7, 2007

I'm here and fine... like ok, not like you know.. sexy.

This is just a copy of the email I sent out that had some issues getting to people. If you didn't get it... tough titties :)

Sorry for the retardedly long list of people I sent this to. My contacts list is immense and though I'd like to have the time to go through and check find who would actually care about this I decided to do the democratic thing and just annoy everyone and let you all sort it out amongst yourselves. And they said I didn't have a good grasp on marketing theory.

I left the US Monday and two days, a subway sandwich in Ramstein, Germany, and a cramped commercial flight later I stepped off onto Kuwaiti tarmac in the wee hours of the morning. Things smell different over here... probably because Axe body spray hasn't caught on yet. It's blistering hot and windy during the day and just hot during the night and the sun rises to fill a dusty blue gray sky before 5 AM. The men hold hands and generally act kind of like adolescent boys and I haven't actually seen a local female yet. I'm beginning to see why there are so many conflicts in this region.

So far things are business as usual just getting used to the climate and taking orientation classes. I don't really feel like I'm halfway across the world. I still eat three times a day and hop on the internet at night. America knows how to go to war. We even have a KFC and a Starbucks. The same company that wouldn't serve my friend because she was in uniform apparently takes no issue with placing a store in the middle of an American military base in a war zone. Capitalism 1 - Ideology 0. The only real difference for me is that I no longer have a cell phone. So don't call me unless you have a thing for voicemail.

So that's that for now, nothing cool to report. I just wanted to write and let you all know I made is safely and despite your worry I think I'd be in worse danger in Los Angeles than I am here. If you received this and don't really know me or care regardless just let me know and I'll be sure to leave you off next time.

Tata for now,
Stephen

P.s. If you want to make a "moment" out of landing in your first war, preset your ipod. Otherwise you may end up getting stuck listening to "If I were Gay" by Stephen Lynch. True story.

Saturday, February 24, 2007

Access Denied

Since I can't get on myspace on this government computer, I'm going to write on facebook to scratch the itch that's been bugging me all week. I've had to give up my laptop for about a month while I'm doing the Ranger Indoctrination Program so my internet mobility has been stiffled for a while as I am forced to use DOD computers that balk at allowing access to any site the government deems inappropriate. The word "blow job" in one of my friends posts blocked me from viewing my facebook profile on a computer that I actually paid to use. This one in the library is free and aparently is BJ blind which is nice... I don't really like them anyway.

RIP hold is some major bullshit. We stand a lot. I have formed a pretty sweet sunburn line around the back of my freshly shaved head where my PC ends. It's only slightly embarassing to go out in public with it. But then I tell people how I got it and they go "Oh" and stop laughing. The rumors going around about that I've volunteered for are bad and mostly true so the average soldier doesn't want to have anything to do with it. Which is great since I don't want to have anything to do with the average soldier. Finally a place where my elitism is nurtured, with good reason to back it up. The Rangers are simply the best light infantry in the world. From what we've been told, only 23 Rangers have died in combat over the last 5 years. Mostly because they don't have to wait around for confirmation to engage the enemy so when the opportunity presents its self they take it with lethal efficiency. I'm not a aggresive guy but these are the people I want to be around when bullets start flying.

The real test starts next week. So I'll finally get to see if I'm as good as I think I can be. And if not at least I can say I tried which most people never will be able to. Wish me luck... Oh and wish also that I'll somehow get to play my guitar a little bit too. I miss that damn thing more and more every day. Music is such a huge part of who I am. I'm always going to have to share my life between whatever I'm doing and being a musician. Much love to y'all.

Rangers lead the way.