Last night I took three of the kids out for dinner. While we were gone, we got a message asking us to get some of our son's clothes packed up. We decided to pack everything. Three black trash bags, a backpack and a lot of clothes on hangers wait by the door for someone to come and pick them up.
While we packed I did three loads of laundry to be sure everything was out of the laundry room. As we cleaned out the drawers, one of my daughters found cell phone chargers and other things she was missing during the past few months. We thought stealing was a bigger problem before the violence. Now it seems very small by comparison.
It is always sad to pack for someone else. In Germany in the 70s I helped to pack up the gear and personal effects of a soldier who went home in a hospital plane. We were starting an M60A1 tank with slave cables (REALLY heavy duty jumper cables). To slave start a tank, you either pull the tanks close side by side or nose to nose. The slave cables drop into the drivers hatch in the hull and plug into a connector just below the hatch.
The second tank approached the first straight on from a slight. The young soldier--I'll call him Ed--was up on the hull of the dead tank next to the driver's hatch. As the second tank approached he dropped the cable--and decided to pick it. He jumped off the side of the tank out of the way, but then went between the tanks to retrieve the cable rather than just pulling it up. He did not know why. No one else did. In a confusing moment he stood up and got caught between the tanks.
His pelvis was broken. He screamed.
A week later, several of us packed his things.
I thought of Ed when I was packing last night.
My wife and I insist our kids pack their own bags for trips--especially the trip home. I just thought it was a good skill for them to have. It was pretty clear last night I do not have good memories of packing for someone else.
Veteran of four wars, four enlistments, four branches: Air Force, Army, Army Reserve, Army National Guard. I am both an AF (Air Force) veteran and as Veteran AF (As Fuck)
Thursday, August 2, 2012
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
My wife Annalisa wrote very well about the sad last day our foster son spent in our home. http://miser-mom.blogspot.com/2012/07/the-child-who-left-our-home.html
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Failure is an Option
I am waiting for a waiver to serve in a combat zone over 60. This waiver, unlike the one to extend my enlistment, must be approved in Washington. It could fail.
But as of last night my wife is more at peace about the deployment--whichever way the waiver decision goes.
Last night her biggest worry for the deployment left our house in handcuffs. The 15-year-old boy we took in our house in April became more and more angry over the last two weeks and finally became so enraged over being caught in a lie that he had a fit that included breaking things with a hammer and threatening himself and the rest of our family.
He had a troubled past, but we were assured by his social worker in Lehigh Valley that he simply had bad breaks. My wife and I thought we would try to give him the "forever home" he said he wanted.
But a forever home has rules and it is tough to give up what we know for something else--even if it is better. C.S. Lewis says that after a religious conversion the convert will often find his former desires fill his mind. And even if the convert manages to keep the desires from taking over, the voice of desire inside "will be up on an elbow. . .whining."
Failure is an option in taking a child into a family--whether by adoption or birth. C.S. Lewis writes in another place (in the 1940s before TV) about how difficult it is to convince a child in poverty in the city to give up playing in a puddle in the slums to travel to the sea shore. We were not able to convince our new son that living as part of a family was actually better than the life he left in foster care--20 different foster homes.
Failure is an option in the military. Not all military missions succeed.
Failure is an option in bicycle racing. Over the last decade I have lost 20 bicycle races for each victory.
Failure is an option in running races. I won just one running race in my life and in that I won my age group.
Today we will receive a stack of paperwork that must be resubmitted to the Haitian embassy for another child we are hoping to adopt. We are very sure he will do well in America, but we have much less confidence in our ability to navigate the paperwork through the Haitian system. Failure is an option here also.
Tonight my wife and I are going out to dinner to celebrate our 15th anniversary. We have three grown daughters who are doing very well and three more kids at home who seem on track to do well also. We both know that risk can mean reward and that risk can mean failure.
We will be taking more risks together and separately--and moving forward with our very complicated and interesting lives.
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
AOL in MY House
Today a video crew from AOL on line is filming me and my family at my home in Lancaster. Later today we will go to Fort Indiantown Gap so I can join in some training. The training shots will be set up by SSG Matt Jones at the Public Affairs Office. He and I served together in Iraq. He was the PAO for 28th Aviation, but he got promoted and moved to an Infantry Brigade earlier this year.
When the video goes on line, I will link to it on the blog. In the meantime I will try to post some more pictures.
When the video goes on line, I will link to it on the blog. In the meantime I will try to post some more pictures.
Monday, July 23, 2012
Waiting for the Next Waiver
At drill weekend this month I found I need yet another waiver if I am going to deploy. As I had heard months ago, I not only needed a waiver from The Adjutant General of Pennsylvania to stay in for two more years, but I need a waiver from National Guard HQ in the Pentagon to serve in Afghanistan past my 60th birthday.
In case you are wondering, sending me over and then sending me home for my 60th birthday next May is not among my options.
I would say there is a good reason why they won't let soldiers who are qualified serve past age 60, but the reason may not be good. I have heard it is because some National Guard and Reserve soldiers served in Iraq and Afghanistan past age 60 and came home on a medical. If that's true it would make sense to stop old soldiers from serving. Why bother if they are going to go home early on some kind of medical.
If that's true, I don't have much of a chance. In my own state the general officers approving the waiver could ask my commander and their sergeant major about me.
But at Army headquarters, I am just another packet of papers. It means risk if they say yes, no risk if they say No.
So the most likely outcome is that I will serve my last two and a half years in the Army in Pennsylvania.
I'll be happy either way.
Sunday, July 15, 2012
Out the Window
We are flying back from Reading to Fort Indiantown Gap. Here's the view out my window. The picture is me just before take off.
Days like this I can't quite believe I get paid for this.
Days like this I can't quite believe I get paid for this.
Reading Airport--Where my Dad Served In World War 2
After dropping off infantry soldiers at the Reading Armory, we flew to Reading Airport. This small municipal airport has very little passenger traffic. During World War 2, the place was bustling. The airport served as a transhipment point for P-47 and P-51 fighter aircraft and B-24 bombers going into combat.
According to the poster in the display case, the northeast corner of Reading Airport also served as a Prisoner of War camp. The last commandant of that camp during the war was 1st Lieutenant George Gussman. The POW camp housed 600 mostly Afrika Corps German prisoners captured in 1942 and 43.
Dad was the third commandant. In one of his many war stories about the camp, Dad said those prisoners had driven the last two commanders nuts with Geneva Convention complaints.
The previous commandants were young officers wounded and in charge of the camp while they recovered their health. Their heart was not in it and they got out of there as soon as they could. Dad came to command of the POW camp after commanding a black maintenance company. He was very old (almost 40!!!) so he was not goign to be sent overseas. He was Jewish, the son of Russian-Jewish immigrants who escaped the pogroms of late 19th century Russia.
He was a middleweight boxer before he joined the Army and not inclined to take crap from German prisoners.
At an early meeting with the prisoners, one of them made a remark about Dad being a Jew. Dad knew Yiddish and enough German to know understand the remark.
Dad laid him out and let them know this was his camp and would run by his rules. Elsewhere on this blog I have written about The Engagement Present--600 chocolate bars Dad confiscated from the prisoners and gave to his future bride--and my Mom.
I haven't been here for almost 30 years. There is not much evidence that the camp ever existed. But it was a big part of my Dad's life, and the subject of many stories I heard as a kid.
According to the poster in the display case, the northeast corner of Reading Airport also served as a Prisoner of War camp. The last commandant of that camp during the war was 1st Lieutenant George Gussman. The POW camp housed 600 mostly Afrika Corps German prisoners captured in 1942 and 43.
Dad was the third commandant. In one of his many war stories about the camp, Dad said those prisoners had driven the last two commanders nuts with Geneva Convention complaints.
The previous commandants were young officers wounded and in charge of the camp while they recovered their health. Their heart was not in it and they got out of there as soon as they could. Dad came to command of the POW camp after commanding a black maintenance company. He was very old (almost 40!!!) so he was not goign to be sent overseas. He was Jewish, the son of Russian-Jewish immigrants who escaped the pogroms of late 19th century Russia.
He was a middleweight boxer before he joined the Army and not inclined to take crap from German prisoners.
At an early meeting with the prisoners, one of them made a remark about Dad being a Jew. Dad knew Yiddish and enough German to know understand the remark.
Dad laid him out and let them know this was his camp and would run by his rules. Elsewhere on this blog I have written about The Engagement Present--600 chocolate bars Dad confiscated from the prisoners and gave to his future bride--and my Mom.
I haven't been here for almost 30 years. There is not much evidence that the camp ever existed. But it was a big part of my Dad's life, and the subject of many stories I heard as a kid.
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