At April's Drill if the weather is decent, I should be flying to western Pennsylvania to cover air assault training for an infantry unit on Saturday and watching Blackhawk crews practice fire surpression. There should be great pictures if the mission goes off according to plan. There will be both Chinook and Blackhawk helicopters on the air assault training mission. I am hoping to ride on the ramp at the back of the Chinook and shoot pictures of the Blackhawks flying in formation. We will be flying west in the morning and east in the evening, so I will have to ask for some kind of turn to the north or south during the trip or my pictures wil all be silhouettes.
On Sunday, I want to be on the ground near where the 500-gallon bucket picks up water and get a shot of that and then catch the water dropping from the bucket. It should be dramatic if I can get close enough.
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)
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Lunch with my Commander in Iraq
Last Thursday I had lunch with Col. Scott Perry and SPC Andrea Magee at the cafeteria in the state capitol in Harrisburg. Perry was my battalion commander in Iraq, Magee was his assistant. Perry is the state representative for the 92nd District in Pennsylvania. Our state, like many others, is in the middle of a messy budget process, so Perry had to leave one of the marathon sessions for lunch. Andrea and I both thought lunch would be fast because of all Perry had to do, but we talked for most of an hour and got a look at the legislature you don't see from the gallery.
The Pennsylvania State Capitol building is by many one of the most beautiful buildings of its kind in the world. He told us where in France the marble that lines the walls, the artists who painted the murals, when different parts were restored--he is an encyclopedia of Capitol facts.
At lunch we talked about Andrea's path to a commission and her life as a full-time soldier with a full-time soldier husband in the same brigade. In addition to the budget, Scott's wife is 7 months pregnant with their second child, construction of their new home is delayed by the weather, and he is in a master's program at the Command and General Staff College.
We all talked about how much easier life was in Iraq--at least as far as setting priorities. We all had a commander and nothing to balance in life--work, eat, sleep, work out and do the whole thing again.
The Pennsylvania State Capitol building is by many one of the most beautiful buildings of its kind in the world. He told us where in France the marble that lines the walls, the artists who painted the murals, when different parts were restored--he is an encyclopedia of Capitol facts.
At lunch we talked about Andrea's path to a commission and her life as a full-time soldier with a full-time soldier husband in the same brigade. In addition to the budget, Scott's wife is 7 months pregnant with their second child, construction of their new home is delayed by the weather, and he is in a master's program at the Command and General Staff College.
We all talked about how much easier life was in Iraq--at least as far as setting priorities. We all had a commander and nothing to balance in life--work, eat, sleep, work out and do the whole thing again.
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Reading for Lent
I have a new co-worker, Preston Stone, who learned Coptic just so he could read the Scripture and other books in that Egyptian language. He's a serious reader. He is reading all of the Divine Comedy for Lent--three Cantos per day for 33 days, then seven to catch up when he gets behind.
Just before Lent I talked to my kids about what they were giving up for Lent. Lauren is giving up sweets for 40 days. Lisa is eating Vegan for Lent. Preston convinced me that rather than give up something, I could do something. So on the train back and forth to Philadelphia, before I start working I read the Gospel of John in French and Greek. I got a parallel Gospel of John in Paris with Greek on the left page and French on the right. Since my vocabulary is spotty in both languages, sometimes I can figure out the Greek from the French or vice versa.
My plan was a half a chapter a day with 21 chapters, so I started a day behind and three days late. At my present rate, I won't get past chapter 12 by Easter.
My step-daughter, Iolanthe, asked me if I would consider giving up sarcasm for Lent. I told her it would be easier for me to actually give up Food as the Lord did than to give up sarcasm. Either one would be beyond me!
Just before Lent I talked to my kids about what they were giving up for Lent. Lauren is giving up sweets for 40 days. Lisa is eating Vegan for Lent. Preston convinced me that rather than give up something, I could do something. So on the train back and forth to Philadelphia, before I start working I read the Gospel of John in French and Greek. I got a parallel Gospel of John in Paris with Greek on the left page and French on the right. Since my vocabulary is spotty in both languages, sometimes I can figure out the Greek from the French or vice versa.
My plan was a half a chapter a day with 21 chapters, so I started a day behind and three days late. At my present rate, I won't get past chapter 12 by Easter.
My step-daughter, Iolanthe, asked me if I would consider giving up sarcasm for Lent. I told her it would be easier for me to actually give up Food as the Lord did than to give up sarcasm. Either one would be beyond me!
Thursday, March 24, 2011
Published in REader's Digest
A friend at Church sent me a copy of Reader's Digest that included my comment on the current phrase "Too Easy."
Reminded About Why I Enlisted
In the last week I was reminded about a good and a not-so-good reason I re-enlisted. First the good reason.
When I saw the first footage of Tomahawk cruise missiles launching from US ships, I was thinking, 'I am so glad to be serving in the best military in the world.' Earlier in the day reports from Benghazi told of Libyan soldiers firing machine guns at civilians and laughing and joking while they did it. This was an army that was sure they were going to win.
Then every anti-aircraft missile battery in the Libya was hit or on the target computer of 100+ Tomahawks. French Mirage fighters were tearing Libyan tanks to pieces outside Benghazi. The lopsided battle of rebels against armor flipped. It was now a more lopsided battle of Libyan ground troops without air support against fighter jets.
I know that depending on your politics there are 100 things wrong with us attacking Libya. But I love to watch CNN when poop happens anywhere in the world.
OK, that's the good one.
Last night I went to a Church group meeting and remembered exactly why I joined the Army. The one hour meeting was to decide if we as a group should join with a local group that helps single mothers and help one single mom for one year--a commitment of an hour or two per month. The group discussed why and why not for a whole hour and reached no decision. In fact, we have a vague plan to further discuss it at the next meeting in two weeks.
I had forgotten, but remembered last night that this kind of thing was one of the reasons I re-enlisted four years ago. I had volunteered for a few different local ministries, but I wanted to do something, not talk and talk and talk about it. I also, to my own shame, would volunteer and then something else would come up--like working late or a bike ride--and I would beg off whatever charity thing I was supposed to do. I knew if I enlisted, service would not be optional or subject to my whims. I also knew that when I was assigned a task, it would not include a long process of deciding whether it fit with my feelings.
At the next meeting I expect my wife and another woman in the group to take the lead and we will help one of the single moms from this group. After all, the most clear command in the Bible, for those who take it literally, is to help widows and orphans.
When I saw the first footage of Tomahawk cruise missiles launching from US ships, I was thinking, 'I am so glad to be serving in the best military in the world.' Earlier in the day reports from Benghazi told of Libyan soldiers firing machine guns at civilians and laughing and joking while they did it. This was an army that was sure they were going to win.
Then every anti-aircraft missile battery in the Libya was hit or on the target computer of 100+ Tomahawks. French Mirage fighters were tearing Libyan tanks to pieces outside Benghazi. The lopsided battle of rebels against armor flipped. It was now a more lopsided battle of Libyan ground troops without air support against fighter jets.
I know that depending on your politics there are 100 things wrong with us attacking Libya. But I love to watch CNN when poop happens anywhere in the world.
OK, that's the good one.
Last night I went to a Church group meeting and remembered exactly why I joined the Army. The one hour meeting was to decide if we as a group should join with a local group that helps single mothers and help one single mom for one year--a commitment of an hour or two per month. The group discussed why and why not for a whole hour and reached no decision. In fact, we have a vague plan to further discuss it at the next meeting in two weeks.
I had forgotten, but remembered last night that this kind of thing was one of the reasons I re-enlisted four years ago. I had volunteered for a few different local ministries, but I wanted to do something, not talk and talk and talk about it. I also, to my own shame, would volunteer and then something else would come up--like working late or a bike ride--and I would beg off whatever charity thing I was supposed to do. I knew if I enlisted, service would not be optional or subject to my whims. I also knew that when I was assigned a task, it would not include a long process of deciding whether it fit with my feelings.
At the next meeting I expect my wife and another woman in the group to take the lead and we will help one of the single moms from this group. After all, the most clear command in the Bible, for those who take it literally, is to help widows and orphans.
Friday, March 18, 2011
Boss Goes Extra Mile on Army Guard Service
My employer has always been great about my service in the National Guard--although very surprised that I signed up.
Last month I talked with my new boss about my vacation plans and said I was planning a couple of weeks away with my kids plus unpaid leave for summer camp. She didn't know sumer camp was unpaid leave.
She said she would talk to our leadership team about changing that. Today she told me they agreed and beginning in June I will be on paid leave for summer camp.
Wow!!
Serving on active duty in the states is a very big pay cut for me, so paid leave is quite a big deal.
We had a ceremony several months ago when the Army gave CHF a thank you certificate for supporting the Guard and Reserves. I'll have to see if there is a new category they fall into now.
From the left: SFC Albert Newman (retired) ESGR Representative; Tom Tritton, CHF President and CEO; Denise Creedon, Vice President (my boss), and me.
Last month I talked with my new boss about my vacation plans and said I was planning a couple of weeks away with my kids plus unpaid leave for summer camp. She didn't know sumer camp was unpaid leave.
She said she would talk to our leadership team about changing that. Today she told me they agreed and beginning in June I will be on paid leave for summer camp.
Wow!!
Serving on active duty in the states is a very big pay cut for me, so paid leave is quite a big deal.
We had a ceremony several months ago when the Army gave CHF a thank you certificate for supporting the Guard and Reserves. I'll have to see if there is a new category they fall into now.
From the left: SFC Albert Newman (retired) ESGR Representative; Tom Tritton, CHF President and CEO; Denise Creedon, Vice President (my boss), and me.
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