I want to keep this feature going, so, if you have a military story, e-mail me with the subject “Military”. Thanks.
jamestox (AT3, U.S. Navy) sent this joke in (though it probably has a lot of truth about military life):
From: Attack Squadron XXXXXX-XXXXX
To: Family members and close friends of service members
Subject: Return of service member from at-sea deployment
This letter has been written to give you advance warning of the forthcoming return of your service member, on or about XX December, 19XX, from deployment in the Mediterranean Sea with Carrier Group XXXX, embarked on USS XXXXXXXXXXXXX (CV-XX), a unit of Battle Forces SIXTH FLEET.
Due to the nature of duty your service member has been subjected to, you may find it necessary to “retrain” him for non-deployment life. With your full
cooperation in following the proven recommendations in this letter, your service member’s transition back to full, non-deployment “normal” life should be obtainable within a maximum of 2 to 3 years – assuming there are no additional deployments in the meantime.
The following recommendations may seem a bit harsh at first, but your service member will benefit greatly from them and will love you more for your loving care and understanding.
TO HELP YOUR SERVICE MEMBER TO READJUST TO HIS NEW ENVIRONMENT, PRACTICE THE FOLLOWING:
1. Secure (close and lock) the bathroom for a minimum of 23 hours and 45 minutes daily.
2. Put toilet tissue out only once a month (supply other family members with their own rolls during the readjustment period).
3. Limit the service member’s water usage to a maximum of 30 gallons per day (to include laundry, dirty dishes, car washing, and lawn/garden watering for the entire household, as well as the service member’s personal needs).
HELPFUL HINTS:
Under no circumstances should you let your service member take a hot shower; this could cause permanent psychological damage. This can be done by securing the valve from the water heater when the service member enters the bathroom.
As for the service member’s laundry, always return fewer clothes than he puts in or instant insanity could result (due to having too many clean clothes to choose from). When washing his clothing, add at least one full cup of itching powder; this will make his clothes feel “normal” and keep him too busy to yell orders to you or anyone else in the vicinity. Over time, reduce the amount of itching powder, since this condition is only temporary and will dissapear with love and time (in that order).
You may find it necessary to move your household to a location beneath a bowling alley for the service member to fall asleep at night. He is accustomed to hearing loud noises above him while he is sleeping (e.g. catapult shots, aircraft engaging arresting gear during landings, F-4 Phantoms crashing on the flight deck, etc.). If it is impossible to find a bowling alley with a basement, a large steel mill will suffice – although it must have a stamping press that runs at night.
MEAL PREPARATION
All meats must be prepared in such a way as to be burnt on the outside and still frozen in the center. Mashed potatoes should be prepared in a manner that will cause them to “run” all over the plate and mix with his dessert. Fresh milk should be available only for the first week of the month, with “long-shelf-life-container” liquid milk provided for the next three days, and nonfat-dry milk the remainder of the month. Canned, mixed vegetables, ketchup, and pepper hot sauce are to be provided for two of the three daily meals to allow the service member to make vegetable soup if he so desires. Pancakes can be made in one of two ways: thin and rubbery or thick and hard (the service member will recognize these two varieties as “tire-patch” and “armor-plate”). Powdered and brewed beverages (instant lemonade, Kool-Ade, iced tea) should be mixed with a minimum of sugar and diluted to about half its intended strength. Coffee should be brewed a recommended three days.
“DRILLS”
The following may occur from time to time during your service member’s stay at home and are nothing to be alarmed about. Do not be concerned with unusual reactions to normal, everyday sounds such as those created by handheld electronic games, railroad trains, doorbells or telephones – to which he may exit the front door, pulling on his clothes at a dead run to “man his battlestation.” Conversely, he may secure himself in some manner to something solid such as an indoor column, bannister, or commode in preparation of a collision with another seagoing vessel. This behavior becomes instinctive through the practice of shipboard “drills” and is considered quite normal so soon after an at-sea deployment. Your service member can be restored to a non-drill condition by sounding one short blast on a whistle and saying, “Now, secure from …” and state the drill in which he was taking part. Simple observation and common sense will cue you on the type of drill. Some quite common shipboard drills are: General Quarters (“battlestations”), Collision, Man-Overboard, and Mail Call. Note: until your service member fully realizes he’s no longer on deployment, we recommend you “drill” him ocassionally to prevent a sense of paranoia and psychological unease. One highly recommended drill is General Quarters; this drill should be held during his normal sleeping hours and last a MINIMUM of 2 hours. Be sure to pass the word: “No eating, drinking or smoking”, as this is a normal condition during G.Q. – and one in which some service members are lax.
TV
Do not be alarmed if your service member sets the television picture out of focus, turns up the volume to the point of loud distortion, then starts complaining that, “…the TV is mess ed up again because the idiot running the studio used the WRONG lens on the projector to show the movie.” He may also kick the coffee table over and put his heels on it after sitting on the sofa and loudly mumble to himself for long periods. This condition is normal and temporary, lasting through the first few months of non-deployment life.
Misc.
There may be other unusual things you will notice your service member doing; such behavior normally disappears over time in his new environment. Some examples may include measuring and stirring sugar into his coffee with either a knife or fork, using an unusually heavy (and nearly inedible) amount of seasoning on his meals, going through a safety-gear checklist prior to mowing the lawn, performing a “FOD walkdown” on the driveway every morning, or loudly shouting “door coming closed – stand CLEAR!!!” when shutting the garage door. I must once again stress that these things are perfectly normal and almost always harmless.
If there is anything our squadron can do in helping you with your service member’s reacclimation to non-deployment life, feel free to call us or your nearest Armed Forces activity. The US military has a fine medical department with 24-hour emergency psychiatrists on duty, should you or your service member require immediate attention. I hope this letter has been of assistance to you. I must assure you, there are only a few things your service member need be taught again.
Very sincerely,
XXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXX
Post-deployment Assistance Officer, ATKRON-XX
Jason writes about a usual day for the National Guard:
I spent a couple of years in the New York Army National Guard. The National Guard gets a lot of stick, this story I about to relay is a good example of why. Our 2 week annual training every summer was usually pretty uneventful. I and 3 of my buddies had managed to secure three of the most coveted positions in the company. I was the CO driver, another was a Platoon Leader driver and yet another was the XO driver. This probably was done on purpose to try and keep up separated. The unforeseen problem was that this gave all three of unfettered access to vehicles 24 hours a day. The base we were on was no base at all. It was a ‘camp’. In theory it was the equivalent to Camp David, but for the governor of New York and not the President. Camp Smith, as it is called, is pretty open. It is not unusual for military vehicles to leave there at any time of day. One afternoon ‘Dan’ had purposely gotten the XO vehicle dirty. He was unable to clean before chow that night telling the XO he would do it after chow. The thing was the bay for washing vehicles close before evening show. The XO, of course had no idea. At about 2100 that night, Dan, Steve, and I slipped into the night the Sgt. ‘nobody’. We took a Sergeant because the rest of us were SPC. and we needed someone to take the blame if we got caught. Everyone except for Dan was in civilian clothes. Dan had his in a bag. He has to at least drive of camp in BDU’s. We drove about 30 miles to Wallkill NY. We figured that was sufficient enough not to raise any alarms. First things first we had to get the M1009 washed. The M1009 is a Chevy Blazer outfitted for the military. In Wallkill NY seeing a blazer painted camouflage does not tend to get noticed. Anyways what easier ways to wash it then to take it through an automatic car wash, right? No. We had forgotten about the $600 radio antenna that was tied down on the side of the M1009. It snapped in two pieces in the car wash. It was at this time the sergeant with us realizes why we had brought him along and proceeded to freak out. He was then offered the option to walk or continue the mission. We just ended up going to some sports bar. That was pretty uneventful. We headed back to Camp Smith. There was still the issue of the antenna that needed to be taken care of. Dan said he would take care of it. We were all in our bunks by 0300. We only had to be up in two hours. When we did get up, Dan was immediacy greeted by the XO. “SPC. Podinski I was looking for you last night, you were not in your bunk.” Sir, I may have been in the Latrine” “I checked the latrine, you were not there” Sir, I said ‘I may have been in the latrine’, I did not say I was there.” “You were not in your bunk, where were you?” “Sir, I can neither confirm nor deny that I was not in my bunk at that time you specified because my watch is broken.” At that point the XO gave up and walked away, seeing how he knew what had happened, and knew that we could not prove it. Our story does not end their kids. You all remember that antenna that got broken, right? It turns out that Dan had taken the antenna of the M1009 that Steve was driving. So Steve ended up having some explaining to do, but it was all good since the whole excursion was his idea anyways. I am since out. Steve and Dan both went on to OCS and now have their enlisted men pulling the same kind of stuff on them.
The names have been changed to protect the guilty.
Chad got this from his roommate and it shows a different side of Iraq:
I got this email from my cousin who is in iraq right now. i thought you guys might find it interesting. it makes me either want to not pay taxes or
join the army….im not sure:
Things have been quite a bit calmer as of late. I’m just living one day at
a time out here. I noticed that when I start to think about coming home I get depressed and the days go by slower, so I just try to keep the though of what day it is out of my head. I know I don’t have a whole lot of time
left.
Iraq isn’t my favorite country to say the least. One Iraqi man asked
me if I enjoyed being here in Iraq, I just glared at him, I couldn’t believe he
even asked me that. A vast majority of the Army out here does nothing…literally. They are just bodies used as man-power. I’ve noticed their lifestyle, and talked to a couple of 82nd Airborne guys and they
told me all about how most of the soldiers wake up whenever they want, go to
eat chow, watch a couple of movies, do whatever, then their “work day” is complete. I think I know how a lot of these guys handle being out here for
a year or so…they don’t do ANY work. What a joke, what a horrible waste of tax-payers money. 1 Thing I will never forget about the military is the disgusting waste of our tax dollars. No one seems to care about it either, it’s amazing. Abuse of government vehicles, ragging on them to amuse a few people, and various other things. It makes me sick that my taxes are being spent to fund stupidity. Anyhow, enough of my ramblings, I’m a bit tired right now. Thanks for the news! Love, Matt.
Finally, Blackfive has up a story of escorting a hero home. A must read.


The military is wonderful. The toilet paper soution is true.
Hey! A CUCV!
“All meats must be prepared in such a way as to be burnt on the outside and still frozen in the center.”
Grin That’s my dad’s specialty.
Chad,
Chill, dude. The military works for salary, NOT by the hour. These same 82nd AB or any other military outfit, often work 12-18 Hour days. NO OVERTIME. Did you feel better a year ago when they were slogging throught the desert for 24/7, NONSTOP? Jeez! And, consider that at the drop of a hat, these folks will be called into a more active position where their lives will be on the line to keep us free. I think that’s a pretty good value for my tax dollar. In fact, I can’t think of a BETTER way to spend my taxes!!
clews, you really need to read what Frank said before the story. My roommates cousin sent him the email. I’m just passing it along.
I’m with you, I totally support what they’re doing out there.
This email just made me think, hope it makes all of you think. That’s all.
Okay. I read that part, but I still don’t understand why anyone would think that hours, days, or weeks of sheer boredom is the “Life of Riley”. I know I had my days in the USAF where I had no specific responsibilities other than to sit around and perform a 2 minute weather observation every hour. But, of the 20 years I spent with thte USAF, it was the most psychologically and emotionally challenging. It’s pretty quiet 150 miles north of the Arctic Circle…
Just a reminder–it is now May 1, 2004. Limey Day!
Is anyone else kinda looking forward to seeing what (if anything) happens?
–Chad’s roommate’s cousin’s email is so far beneath contempt that I can’t even believe it. Guess what, Chad’s roommate’s cousin? War sucks! Big time! Stick around the service long enough and you’ll see that all that standing around is replaced with constant, motion- fighting- digging fighting holes- running- shooting- etc.
–War is always the same. Always. It is periods of intense and terrifying action separated by periods of mind-numbing inaction. Go fill some sand bags… that will take your mind off of it.
–We’ll work on making our next war more labor cost effective for you, okay?
–Ah, yes… May 1st. Well, guess I’ll have another cup of coffee before I cammie up and climb up on the roof with my Springfield ’03 and other friends. (My neighbors really hate when I do that, by the way… so I really hope the limey comes through this time!)
Good job, Devil Dog. That email pissed me off, too.
That worthless limey STILL hasn’t sent ME any nasty email. To top it all off, he also BS’ed us about the end of Capitalism. I went out and maxed all my credit cards in the expectation that the world’s financial system would collapse and I would be off the hook. Oh well- time for Plan B
Military Story Time
Paul says he’s always up for a good story, and Frank has been soliciting Military stories for some time now.
http://www.albasrah.net/images/iraqi-pow/iraqi-pow
Be…ALL THAT YOU CAN BE…
You guys are a bit hung up on American exceptionalism, I think…
ah, but ignore the pictures on the bottom; those are from some porn flick. damn Al-Jazeerian assholes and their propaganda machine.
the ones from the prison are real though, and are all over CBS and CNN.
That email reminds me of me in some ways. Way back when I was in the Army I can remember days where I would kill for something constructive to do. I also remember days, weeks, even months where I would have killed for nothing to do. Being very young has it’s draw backs. One tends not to see, or even think about, the big picture. If I were in a combat zone though, I’d be pretty happy to have some guys form the 82nd around, no matter what they were doing. Besides, after what those guys have been through the past couple of years, they’ve earned any time off they get.
Like DD and rockynoggin, that e-mail irked me. I’m not in the military (yet), but as far as I’m concerned, money paying for any time our guys and gals have off is money well spent. Everyday procedures for miltary personnel would drive at least half of the civilian population crazy, and the other half would commit suicide. Our military works extremely hard, it should be able to play hard as well.
The story from Blackfive’s link is amazing. Just…damn.
–Well, here I am… less than an hour away from midnight here. Looks like the f’ing limey has let me down again. (Major Payne flashback: “It’s been two whole weeks since I killed me a man… I’m hungry…”)
–In all seriousness, though… I am having a very hard time with this whole Fallujah thing. Can someone please help me here? I’m watching my Marine Corps pull out of positions they fought their asses off to gain. I’m hearing that some Saddam era general is going to go in and “fix” things? I got word from a very dear friend who is THERE… and he is absolutely f’ing floored that this is happening. Someone… please… explain this to me and make it so it isn’t what it looks like to me.
–This is our moment. I will say it straight out: The islamofascists are made of anti-christ stuff. They are here and they are making their play. The entire world is on the brink of giving in to this evil crap. Europe is already engulfed. Our presence in Iraq is absolutely the last chance that anyone on earth has of fending off the wave of pure evil that is coming.
–Have you seen the pictures/videos of the celebrating in Fallujah? They “beat” the American Marines. They drove us out. Holy f’ing crap… this is not happening. Rockynoggin… Dave in Texas… anyone…?? give me something here… tell me that GWB has a plan and this is all part of some great plan-thing.
I wish I had a good response Devil Dog, I really do. I thought our leaders had the courage to do what needed to be done. I may blog on that tonight after I catch up on the news.
It’s not just Frank, Murray & Matt
Murray has weighed in. Frank has been collecting and publishing Military Anecdotes. Blackfive has related tales of stolen air conditioners and miffed French Generals. And that isn’t even the tip of the iceberg…here’s more….
Check out what Belmont Club has to say. Its way to early to be gnashing our teeth.
–Thanks, Lord Worfin… that was good to read. It is obvious to anyone with a brain that there is not a “retreat” going on… but impressions are everything in liberal America and in the crazy-wacky-nutso-completely-f’ing-insane middle east. It is very troubling to see what our dear, sweet media are making this out to be…
To-do list:
1. Ignore troll. (Check!)
2. Gloat over continued existence of capitalism (Check!)
The more I read of the Limey’s posts, the lower my estimate of his age goes.
Also, it isn’t safe to assume that the revolutionary socialist is a coward. Some are/have been quite brave (Dzershinsky, Stalin, Mao, Che’) while some have been abject cowards (Lenin). It is pretty safe to assume that his penchant for emailing (!) trans-Atlantic(!) insults places the Limey in the latter category.
Here is my take on what is happening/should happen in Iraq:
It seems that right now, we (admin) are trying to keep the anti-U.S. sentiment to a minimum in Iraq, as more spells bad news for Pres. Bush. So, as the Fallujah attacks go on, public opinion goes down. Public opinion wasn’t an issue when the battle in Iraq started, it shouldn’t be one now. I can only hope that right after Bush is re-elected, the gloves will come off.
As of right now, I think one of the most important things for the administration is to emphasize that Iraq is not a separate war, but rather one battlefield in the larger war on terror.
So after the election, this is what I think should happen:
Send 50-100,000 more troops into Iraq. Absolutely flood the place with U.S. military might, raid large sections of the country simultaneously. Patrol with M2 Bradleys, or at the least armored Humvees. When encountering resistance, neutralize them…HARD. If there is a crowd of cheering insurgents at the site of a previous ambush, send a few Hellfires their way. Limit media access to only non-combat actions. If a media outlet reports on U.S. injured/killed, counter with reports of enemies killed. Basically, stop trying to be viewed as a force who is not trying to impede on Iraqi life. Make it clear that we ARE in control, and that anyone who f’s with us will either be taken into custody or taken out of this world.
yeah, I can see why the United States Military would want to follow your sound advice, Turkeyhead. After all, the other european countries who attempted that tactic in the past and failed…weren’t AMERICAN.
…how do you guys manage to keep BREATHING?
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