Monday, July 6, 2009
Land Nav Part I (Butterflies)
My LandNav experiences in the past had done little to build my confidence in my abilities. We had done three different lanes on two different courses at Basic. The first two were extremely easy, but even still, my first time out I became disoriented on our second point and was flustered the rest of our time on the course. The third lane we did, almost at the end of Basic, was much harder. It was a difficult course and in my group we had trouble finding our first point. In fact we spent over an hour and eventually were forced to move on without it, because we simply could not locate the point. We went on to have mixed success with the rest of the course, finding our next two points through terrain association. That felt good. Our next two points eluded us, however, and we became disoriented on our way back to the rallying point. We ended up coming back in an hour late with only two out of five points for the course. It was disheartening.
The hardest part of these failures was that I knew I could do better than I had. While I had never done any formal land navigation before coming into the Army, like some might do in Eagle scouts or in an orienteering club, I had used maps and terrain association quite a bit when scouting out my hunting positions last summer in anticipation of the Fall archery season in Connecticut. I had taken to it with ease and found maps and locating specific points to be enjoyable. I couldn’t, therefore, understand why I was having so much trouble with Army LandNav.
Monday night at 19:30 we paired up into buddy groups to get a practice run on Yankee North before the next morning when we would get our first try on the actual course. I paired up with OC Redemption, a good partner to have because he keeps his cool under stress. He is not a whiner, which is always a relief. There are too many whiners in the Army and they all seem to come out of hiding within an hour of deploying to the field.
We received a lane with 7 points. We had 2 and ½ hours to plot our points on our maps, determine our route, go get the points and get back to our camp. We both knew we would probably not get all of our points, but we still set out with an optimistic plan to take them all. We found our first point with ease, only 100 meters off of Yankee Road, which dissects the two courses. From there we had to shoot an azimuth through the woods, just a shade North of due West, for roughly 900 meters. The vegetation was thick. We struggled to break through thorn bushes and spider webs to keep on course. Redemption was the compass man and I kept the pace count, to make sure we didn’t over or undershoot our point.
When we go to about 850 meters, we slowed down, swiveling our heads back and forth, scanning through the thick vegetation looking for the orange and white signpost of our point. 900 meters came and we hadn’t seen it. 950 meters and we came to a clearing, on a small hill. We couldn’t see it. At one klick we hit an unimproved road at the edge of the clearing. It was on the map and we had overshot our point. We walked up and down the road trying to spy our point for about 10 minutes unsuccessfully. We then double backed to see if we had missed the point the first time. Nothing was found upon closer inspection. We were off track. I kept looking at the map, trying to use terrain association to pinpoint where we were in relation to our point. I just couldn’t visualize it though. My brain was clogged. There were to many hills right in that area. It could have been either North or South of us, I figured. But it wasn’t far, either way. Frustration started to grip my mind as the clock continued to tick.
OC Redemption and I needed a plan to locate this point. We needed to use the dirt road, which was the closest major land marker. Just about half a klick to our south the road intersected with Yankee Road. We figured we could run over to that intersection, shoot an azimuth to our point and track it down from there. And that is exactly what we did. And this time we fanned out, with about 50 meters in between us, to cover more area. So as we tracked our way up North from the intersection, we kept in visual and voice contact, checking with each other every 100 meters or so. We walked over the hill we had searched before, on the edge of the clearing, and I was about 30 meters short of my end count when we hit the northern edge of the clearing and there was a drop off the hill down into a little draw of a dried up creek. I shouted out to Redemption with joy as I looked left and saw our point just another 25 meters in front of me. “Hell yeah!” I high fived Redemption as he ran over, smiling wide, “We got that shit”. It felt great to track down the point after not being able to find it initially. It is that kind of trouble shooting that really builds confidence.
At that point we should have called it a night. It was 2100 already and our next point was another klick and a half through the woods. But it was still light out and we were feeling confident after our success with the last point. I also think neither one of us wanted to come in with just two out of seven points. So we quickly developed a plan to track down our next point by cutting due West through the woods to the western limit of the course, Jamestown Road. From there we would head North until we would reach an intersection between Jamestown Road and an unimproved road; the intersection is only a couple hundred meters from our point. From there we would shoot a quick azimuth and track it down.
We got off to a quick start, heading due West, down little draws and up hills, thick with vines and felled trees and weeds growing every which way. It took us a little longer than we had hoped, but we eventually came out of the thick onto Jamestown Road. We picked up a quick pace and by 2130 we were at our intersection, but it was getting pretty dark by this time. We shot our azimuth and started off for our point. When we got to 300 meters, our estimated count, we couldn’t see our point. It was too dark to track it down and we were running out of time. Suddenly we saw some red lights up ahead of us, about 150 meters out. We couldn’t tell what they were, but as we got closer we realized they were the lights on a pick up. As we got within 10 meters of the truck, I knew it was Captain Sunshine and SSG Runswaytoofast. Oh boy, here we go, I thought.
We walked right up to the window. Sunshine sort of chuckled and asked what were doing so far out from the camp this late. OC Redemption explained that we were trying to get one last point before we headed in and that we simply couldn’t find it out here in the dark. “Well yeah you guys are right on top of it actually, I mean if it was light out I could point to it from here, so good job on that” he said with a surprising degree of gaiety in his voice. “The trouble is you guys are about three kilometers out from the camp site and you have 10 minutes to get back before time is up” he said smiling big and broad. He looked back at SSG Runswaytoofast, who was smiling too and then he sort of motioned back to the bed of his truck, which had a cover on it. “As you can see I don’t have any room for you, so you guys are going to have to do some double time to get back”. With that he let out a loud laugh and, SSG Runswaytoofast, laughing as well, added, “Yeah you guys are going to have to get some PT time in on your way back”. OC Redemption and I just smiled and laughed and turned around and headed off on our way South along the unimproved road we thought traveled parallel to Jamestown Road.
About five minutes down the road, we realized we should have just back-tracked to Jamestown Road from where we had been, because we had gotten all turned around on this stupid dirt road. So there we were, it was totally dark out and we were lost in the woods roughly three kilometers from where we needed to be, if not more. We shot an azimuth due south and just started trudging through the thickest vegetation we had thus far encountered. It was comical. We were in the thick of it and while we were in good spirits, just below the surface we both knew that we needed to get out of the woods. If we ran up on a wild boar in the dark, thick vegetation like that we would have been in deep doodoo. Neither of us mentioned that, or any of the other dangers, but we both knew it. So we kept pushing through the vegetation and giant, prehistoric spider webs of Yankee North, fighting our way South through the dark, warm Georgia night.
Eventually we got to a dirt road we recognized and we followed that down to Yankee Road, where a cadre member who did have room for us in his Pathfinder gave us a ride back to camp. The ride back was quiet. It had been a partial success, I reasoned, because we had found that one point which we had been unable to find at first and we had successfully gotten ourselves to within eyesight of another difficult point (if only we had had light enough to see it). Nonetheless we were a “no-go” when we handed in our answer key back at camp, because we had come in almost an hour late. “No-go”, the words sunk into your mind bit by bit. LandNav is the single event, aside from the history test, which causes the most recycles at OCS. I didn’t want to get recycled. I didn’t think I would, but still those words “no-go”, rang through some distant, yet present room of my mind. So as I unfurled my sleeping mat and took off my ACU blouse I was, in spite of my efforts to remain upbeat, somewhat nervous for what the morning would bring and my first solo run on Yankee South.
Saturday, June 27, 2009
Pressure Cooking and the Latrine Nazi
The week before last the Cadre started to turn up the heat on Bravo company. One could have guessed it was coming; things had been running a little too smoothly. And the equation was already perfect, waiting for just a little pressure to send the whole company into a tailspin. Branch allocations had been released and everyone was watching the OML and jealously counting their neighbors points and trying to gauge if they would be able to get their first pick come branch day. On top of that our schedule was chalk -full with both classes and physical events, with three tests in total coming up in the week counting towards our ranking on the OML.
When we came back from our afternoon classes on Tuesday, 3rd platoon’s trainers had that look in their eye, like they were fixing to bring the hammer down on us. 3rd platoon’s Officer trainer, who I will call Captain Sunshine, is probably the harshest cadre member in Bravo company. It is not that he is a terrible person or sadistic really, he just seems sort of bitter about his position here. He has a bit of a chip on his shoulder about something, I guess. He is in every way, I should make clear, a professional with great integrity. He is simply not as forgiving as most of the other Cadre members and certainly not as upbeat as Captain Mac. Captain Sunshine is always eager to point out and “correct” whatever deficiencies he can find in us.
Sunshine went straight for the jugular, calling out more than half the members of his platoon off a list he had pulled from his pocket. Immediately you could tell, as you heard the names go out, that the rubber was about to meet the road and we were all going to get burnt up. SSG Runswaytoofast, the senior NCO trainer for 3rd platoon was lecturing 1st platoon on the deficiencies he had “highlighted” in their room displays upstairs. Then he stepped quickly over to our platoon. “Ah 2nd platoon, my favorite platoon because your trainers like to claim you’re squared away, but then I go to check and you are far from it” he started, not in an angry or mean way, but rather just a direct, no sugar sort of fashion that all combat Officers, both commissioned and non-commissioned seem to speak. “I went through your rooms today and highlighted the deficiencies that I found. I didn’t give out any spot reports because that’s not my place, but there were a lot of issues with your room displays. There was one security violation, someone left their compass out”. I quickly ran back in my mind to the memory of locking up my compass in the lower right hand drawer of my wall locker. It wasn’t me, I was fairly certain. Phew! A Class II violation like that this far into the cycle means you would spend the rest of your weekends waxing floors and cleaning toilets.
I had already received a minus 5 spot report the week before, on Friday, and it had cost me six places on the OML. A spot report is not as severe as a violation like a Class II or I; it doesn’t come with any administrative punishment. Rather it is a “on the spot” report a cadre member can give a candidate for doing something worthy of either reward or punishment. The spot report I had received the previous Friday had been because my desk display was disorganized. It was a marginal call, but I did not dispute it because I simply figured they were going to start reviewing everything a lot more closely. So I had taken the time that weekend to square away my room display because I didn’t want to lose anymore points in the OML.
To my delight when we got upstairs I was happy to find that my care and attention over the weekend had paid off. While most of the platoon had their clothes strewn on the floor, or their beds pulled apart, my display had gone untouched. There was a fair amount of luck in that, no doubt, like anything else in the Army school environment, but nonetheless I was happy I had taken the time to get my display straightened out that weekend. Needless to say everyone else was not as pleased as I. There was trash thrown in the hallway from the female latrine, which I guess had also been jacked up. While SSG Runswaytoofast had not given any of us spot reports, Captain Sunshine must have, because a half a dozen people had to report downstairs to SFC Skinny to sign their negative 5 point spot reports. The general spirit was one of dejection and anxiousness. Some people had been gigged up for things that they thought they had done right. An element of insecurity and ambiguity had been injected into the environment. That, coupled with most people’s desire to perform as high as possible for the OML in order to secure their first pick for branch selection led to a frustration and mild panic.
The cadre continued to apply pressure as the week went on, gigging up four more Officer Candidates from my platoon by seizing their camelbacks as we were upstairs showering after breakfast chow, the next day, and claiming that they had been left unsecured. There was nothing wrong in their assertion, except that we had never left guards for our camelbacks before and we had never been briefed to do so by any of the cadre at any point. The arbitrary nature of this move confused and frustrated those OCs immensely, and it again lent to the general panic within the company as everyone now began to stand even a little higher on their toes as they walked through the events of the week.
The cadre’s attempt to unease us all was quite effective. People began to falter from their super ego displays left and right, becoming shorter with each other, trading in their previous smiles and laughs in for grimaces and harsh words. It is at a moment like this when old “Harry” Calhoun would have taken the bait and jumped into the fray, engaging in the destructive exchange of insults and frustrations and accusations that so many succumb to far too easily under stress. But I remembered my previous experiences and collected myself to guard my better spirits against the waves of pernicious energy that were running rampant through the platoon and the company. I tried to remind myself that whatever stress I was experiencing here, would be nothing compared to what I will one day soon enough face in combat, where I will be depended upon as an Officer to maintain the standard of equanimity. I reflected on how, in fact, all of this was really a wonderful opportunity for me to practice maintaining my composure.
Others responded to the stimulus of stress in a variety ways. Perhaps the funniest reaction was that of our beloved OC Latrine Nazi. Latrine Nazi is not in my platoon, but is in 1st platoon, that shares the second floor of the barracks with us. All of the males from our two platoons also share one latrine together for personal hygiene in the mornings. It is a crowded yet unavoidable situation. There are 4 student latrines in the whole barracks, 3 for males and 1 for the females. The 1 latrine for the females happens to be on the second floor, so therefore 1st and 2nd platoon males are all forced to cram into one latrine with 5 dry sinks, 2 wet sinks, 3 urinals, 4 toilets, and 4 shower stalls. It is not really that bad, but it is certainly harder for all of us to get in and out of there in the mornings than it is for the 3rd and 4th platoon males, who have the same space for half the number of OCs.
The real trouble with the latrines being set up this way, is that we have to rotate the cleaning schedule between our 2 platoons. Let me retract that: there is no trouble with the rotation of the cleaning duties between the two platoons, but rather this became the friction point for OC Latrine Nazi. Undoubtedly trying to get 50 to 60 males all in and out of the shower in 45 minutes in the morning and then clean up after them can seem overwhelming, but there is really not all that much to cleaning the latrines. You get a mop, soak up excess water on the floors, you squeegee the shower doors and sink tops and you make sure any debris is picked up. It takes about 4 minutes and 3 people. I guess you also have to check and make sure all of the toilets and urinals have been flushed. Oh yes, and I forgot, you have to take out the trash. Oh my!
The week before last was 1st platoon’s duty week in the latrine and I guess Latrine Nazi’s squad must have been assigned to it, because he was on the detail all week. And about halfway through the week, just as the walls were collapsing and everyone was looking for a self-affirming battle to win, a way of gaining the illusion of righteousness, the Latrine Nazi’s lesser self focused on the latrine as his negative release point. Specifically he created a myth in his mind of how it was 2nd platoon who was walking all over his hard work and trashing the bathroom at every opportunity either for lack of consideration or perhaps just out of spite.
OC Latrine Nazi began standing post at the latrine door in the mornings after they had cleaned and at night(when 2nd platoon is technically supposed to be using the first floor Cadre latrine) refusing members of 2nd platoon entry to use the facilities. One day after breakfast I went to use the urinal and when I was done I went to wash my hands in the wet sink. Latrine Nazi was there and he flipped out, gasping and interrogating me as to what I was doing. “I’m washing my hands” I replied, almost unsure as to where I was, I was so caught off guard by his assault. “Well thanks a lot, really, why don’t you just use the hand sanitizer” he exclaimed emotionally. I looked down to his right and there was, indeed, a giant bottle of hand sanitizer. But personally I find it more sanitary to wash one’s hands when one can. I started to drop my jaw to respond, but was lost for words. “I’m just washing my hands man”. I tried to impart upon him the harmlessness of my actions without going into a long explanation. “Yeah well we have to keep the sinks dry, so you are just making more work for me after I’ve already cleaned that sink”.
Ok, if I had been splashing water all over the place perhaps I would have understood his complaint. But I was simply washing my hands, in the wet sink. “You don’t have to keep these two dry, they are wet sinks we can use throughout the day” I explained to him, trying to mask my growing irritation with his idiotic behavior. “C’mon man” he shrugged his shoulders have if he were trying really hard to show me the logic behind his complaint, “I don’t want to get a negative spot report”. I snapped a bit: “You’re not going to”. “It’s not your neck on the line,” he muttered as he turned his head. I lost it for a second and sharply questioned whether he had gotten a spot report for the wet sink being wet. He just put his head down. I finished washing my hands and left the latrine just as he was getting into it with another OC who was walking up to the other wet sink to wash his hands. I just shook my head.
It is those kinds of petty disputes that will tear a group apart under stress. That and cliques. And Latrine had created both in one instance, by accusing all of 2nd platoon of violating “latrine etiquette”. It is a common way of dealing with stress and aggravation: create a moral enemy, someone to make you feel important and justified. It releases your energies by giving you an outlet. The Latrine Nazi could let off some steam by fighting with us. The trouble is that the people you focus on are usually on your side, not to mention the friction created by such outbursts usually causes the individual more stress in the long run.
To 2nd platoon’s credit no one took his bait. No one went ape shit on him, even though the Latrine Nazi was way out of line and even outright disrespectful of others in week 5 of OCS. I wonder what kind of a 2nd Lieutenant he is going to make when he gets to his unit. It is very telling to watch how people cope with stress; those who can still laugh and smile through it all are the ones I tend to think will make good platoon leaders.
Sunday, June 21, 2009
A few words on fear
Fear is my friend - so long as my name is Courage."
Saturday, June 13, 2009
Cosmopolitan Atmosphere
Arriving at Ft. Benning from Ft. Jackson, I immediately felt as though I had reentered orbit with the rest of the solar system. Ft. Jackson is a sandy, provincial outpost in the galactic hinterlands to which I hope I will never have to return. Part of my perception of Ft. Jackson was undoubtedly shaped by my isolation in a Basic Training Battalion, where I had little access or exposure to the rest of the installation. But nonetheless, it is a post that is in many ways removed from the rest of our universe, or at least lays on its outer edge.
Ft. Benning stands in stark contrast to that; it seems to be at the heart of our 21st century society. A place not lost in time, but one that is setting the standard. It is a beacon in its own right, as Ft. Benning is known as “the Home of the Infantry”. With four Infantry training Brigades, the United States Army Ranger School, and the 3rd Battalion of the 75th Ranger Regiment, it is the place where you go to learn how to fight and win wars on the ground. Going back to the time of Caesar’s legions, Infantry has been the decisive force in battle, and while many of the technological advances of the past two thousand years have changed the way we fight, Infantry’s supremacy on the battlefield and in the warrior community has endured.
“ You may fly over a land forever; you may bomb it, atomize it, pulverize it and wipe it clean of life-but if you desire to defend it, protect it, and keep it for civilization, you must do this on the ground, the way the Roman legions did, by putting your young men in the mud.”
T.R. Fehrenbach
1963
Fehrenbach’s assertion holds true to this day, as our experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan have demonstarted. And so the 199th Brigade, of which I am now a part, is a high profile Brigade with students not only from other services but also other countries. We have the 1st Battalion, 507th Airborne Regiment, where Marines, Airmen, Sailors, and of course, Soldiers all come to get their wings. We have the Jumpmaster’s course and one of the Army’s two Pathfinder schools. We have OCS, obviously, where not only American Army Officer’s train, but also aspiring Officers from some of our Allied countries throughout the world come to further their military education. There is the Basic Officer Leadership Course II, which all commissioned Officers in the United States Army attend. Infantry Officer Basic Course also falls under the umbrella of the 199th Brigade. And I cannot forget to mention the International Student Training Program, more infamously known in many circles, as the “School of the Americas”.
It is, therefore, a very common thing to see Marine First Recon guys coming out of the chow hall, or Jamaican or Italian Officers walking down the halls of building 4, where we take most of our classes. Just this past Tuesday when we were entering the classroom for our instruction on offensive operations and operational terms and graphics, there were maybe 15 soldiers from various other countries sitting in the back with a 1st Lieutenant from the 199th and a couple of civilians who I think were translators. I couldn’t exactly be sure which countries they were from, but they were clad in three different uniforms, though a couple of the groups appeared to share a common language, one which sounded rather Slavic, from the bits and pieces I was able to catch from their translator.
The next day our first class on troop leading procedures was actually given by an Australian Sergeant Major from the Royal Australian Regiment, Sergeant Major Bromwich. Tall and heavy with very red, perpetually sun burnt skin, short gray hair and a bushy black mustache, his Australian accent was thick, but not incomprehensible. He was missing half of his left middle finger and half of his ring finger on his right hand. Sergeant Major, it quickly became apparent, is a professional Infantryman with over 25 years of experience throughout the full spectrum of operations. I felt very privileged to be sitting their receiving instruction from someone of his stature. And I was even happier to have the diversity of nations present in the classroom that day. Perhaps it is my New Yorker’s heart, but for some reason it gives me great pleasure to see and work with Soldiers and Officers from other nations. It makes me feel like I am back at home, in a strange way, living in the center of the universe, the heart of the empire, walking down the streets of our own 21st century Rome.
There is a very good book out right now, Empires of Trust: How Rome Built––and America Is Building––A New World, by Thomas F. Madden, that explores the clichéd comparison between the two empires in a new light and pays particular attention to how both empires developed strong military alliances with many nations in order to bolster their security. It was a book that I read last November and played a significant role in my final decision to come to OCS. I am satisfied that I am now an actor in that history, the history of the American empire, which we are living out, all of us, right now.
Working with Australians and Colombians and Mexicans and Italians and Jamaicans and a hundred other nations towards the goal of greater global stability, it is something I feel is worth sacrifice and risk. It is something beyond speculation and pontification; it is practical, not intellectual. I do not mean to say that there is anything wrong with the intellectual world. It is the world I was raised in my whole life. But it can only take one so far without practical applications to balance it out and nurture it with substance. The military is not the only place where one can find practical dilemmas in need of solution, not by a long shot. There are as many ways to engage the world as there are stars. I only mean to say that I think that for me, the Army was a good choice. I feel like I have grown as much in the past 4 months as I did in the whole previous 4 years.
On a side note, we received information about the branch allocations for our class this past week. 13 Infantry, 6 Military Intelligence, 10 Armor, 10 Signal Corps, 5 Adjutant General, 5 Chemical, 8 Ordnance, 4 Air Defense Artillery, 14 Field Artillery, 4 Engineer, 6 Military Police, 2 Transportation Corps, and 13 Quartermaster slots. It is overall a really good distribution and with 13 Infantry slots, it looks like I will be pinning on those crossed Muskets here in a couple of weeks. Infantry is my first choice, Engineer my second, and I am confident I will make one of those two. I am currently ranked 43rd out of 159 in my class, though that will certainly change in the next two weeks before branching.
Saturday, June 6, 2009
Spider Bites ?
The other morning we had our first Ability Group Run physical training session here at OCS. The way AGR works is they break the whole company down into a couple of different run groups based on our performance in the last PT test. Everyone with a sub 14 minute two-mile time falls out in the Alpha group, infamously dubbed the “A-Train”, throughout the Army. Since I ran my two-mile in 13:32 in my last PT Test, I knew I was going to have to roll out with A-Train. I ran A-Train at Basic and it wasn’t all that bad, but I knew OCS was going to be different, and the run did not disappoint. It was a steady clip for 5 miles, which we completed in under 40 minutes, with some Iron Mikes thrown into the middle. We finished the rail off with 25 pull-ups behind the barracks at the mini obstacle course set up. I was gassed out, but I’d hung in there and for that I was proud.
As we partnered up to do our pull-ups and step up to the bar, I saw a spider web right where my hand needed to go, with a small brown spider on the end. I hesitated for a second; if I had been in the civilian world I probably would have moved onto another bar or found a way to clear the web without using my hand. But as things were I wasn’t going to do that there, at the end of a hard A-Train workout with a Ranger Captain and a Ranger SSG. “Umm excuse me, I can’t do my pull-ups here, because there is a spider in my way”. Can you imagine? These were men who had certainly braved through far worse. So I confidently brushed the web away with my hand.
After a marathon workout like the one we had that morning, my body usually goes numb from all the excess dopamine flowing through my system. I knew I was going to be soar, real soar in my thighs in particular, but it just doesn’t take affect until about mid-day. I was doing my best to hydrate when I got my first charlie horse of the cycle in the middle of class around eleven o’clock. The pain was coming, but I was alright. Soar muscles are in a strange category of mildly pleasurable pain, and for an athlete, it can become addictive. My thighs were soar, my latissimus dorsi were soar, my forearms were soar, and I was feeling good.
I was standing in the line for mid-day chow, however, when I noticed, through all the other signals my body was registering, a sharper, more local pain on the inner thigh of my right leg. It felt like a skin burn, from chaffing. It was rubbing against my ACU pant leg and was quite irritating. I must have not worn my spandex boxers on the run this morning, I wondered to myself. That was annoying and I would pay for it I thought. Nothing to be done about it though.
In the afternoon we broke down into platoons and went to various stations to learn about different weapons and communication systems. We spent about an hour on the M-4 assault rifle, which is a shorter lighter version of the M-16, essentially, and an hour or so on the claymore anti-personnel mine. Around half way through SSG Candyman’s (not his real name) colorful presentation relating the claymore to the anatomy of a woman, I started to notice that along with the previous sensitive spot on my inner thigh, I noticed I was itching and feeling tender on my other thigh, in two places. I didn’t think too much of it, but I decided that when I got the chance I should give it a look and see what was going on. When we got back after suppertime chow to the barracks I went to the latrine, stepped into a stall and dropped my trousers to have a look at what was causing me this pain. I found three almost identical bumps, about half the size of a dime dark red in the middle and lighter red circle expanding outward, however very faintly. They were all very soar to the touch. All of a sudden I thought back to the little brown spider I had pushed away from the pull-up bar earlier that morning. “Son of a bitch” I gritted through my teeth, pulled up my pants and walked back to my room. Nothing I can do about it now, I thought. And so I kept trucking along.
The next morning we didn’t really have PT. We practiced putting ourselves into the extended rectangle formation, the formation in which we do stretching and calisthenics. The cadre knew we were all soar as hell from the day before and so we only did but a handful of push-ups and side straddle hops (the jumping jack) and that was it. It was a nice reprieve. Right from the start of the day, however, I was somewhat concerned that my spider bites seemed to be causing me more pain than they had been the day before. Especially the one on my inner right thigh, which rubbed against my shorts and pants legs and was very irritating. I just figured it was the venom running it course and I would be getting over it in another couple of days. I didn’t think it was anything more serious than a slightly annoying bug bite and a pain in my rear.
The pain continued to grow through Friday and by Saturday I was a little more concerned. I started asking others for advice. Most of the guys either told me to just let it be, or to pop them and drain some of the puss. One of the bites in particular was getting bigger and the red circle was expanding outward and it was getting more tender all the time. Eventually, around 16:00 on Saturday, I realized that I was going to have to seek some medical attention. The pain was getting quite sharp and I was limping in my left leg when I’d walk. So I went to see the Duty Trainer, who happened to be one of my platoon trainers, who I’ll just call SFC Skinny. Skinny may be a very intelligent individual, but he comes across as a bit aloof and awkward. I showed him my bite and he didn’t seem to have much of a reaction. I asked him if I could get a sick hall slip to go to the Troop Medical Center the following morning. He casually explained to me that the TMC was closed on the weekends and that if I needed medical attention I would have to go to the emergency room. I decided I could wait until Monday morning, because I didn’t want to go to the ER. It wasn’t like my leg was falling off, I thought to myself.
Still the pain continued to grow, incrementally and I couldn’t focus on much else at this point. The red circle on my thigh was larger than a baseball and the center was quite dark and hard. Something was wrong and I was, admittedly, a little scared at this point. But I did the best I could to assure myself that everything would be ok and that I would get some help in just another 36 hours.
By this time most of the guys in the platoon knew about my spider bites. In the shower room I was showing the guys who didn’t. It made me feel a little better at least to hear their hoos and awes and watch them make funny faces and say “Jesus Christ”. It made me laugh a little which at least made me feel better physically. Then one of the guys I showed it to got a very serious look on his face. He squinted his eyes and bent down to have a closer look. He said, “Hey man that’s a brown recluse bite”. I said no way, brown recluse bites act a lot quicker. But he insisted “Man listen, I’ve had a couple of brown recluse bites and that is exactly what they look like. If you don’t get that taken care of it is going to start eating away at your flesh”. I was pretty sure it wasn’t a brown recluse, so while his warning was disconcerting, I continued on my way up to my room and got in bed with my book. I would get some help on Monday and it was all going to be fine, I reassured myself.
Not more than five minutes later I heard Officer Candidate Strong say my name down the hall. “Calhoun” I heard her call in her thick, muffled accent. “I hope he don’t have to go to the emergency room” she said very straight forward to someone else. I sat up and put my book down just as she appeared in my doorway demanding to see the bite on my leg. You see Officer Candidate Strong is a prior service medic, with combat experience, so she is actually an authority. Even if she hadn’t been, I wouldn’t have refused her request to inspect it. She isn’t the kind of woman you want to mess with. She’s quite boisterous and truculent. Lucky for me, I am on her good side.
I pulled back my left short leg to show her the bite and surrounding rash. She looked concerned. Behind her by now was another former medic. The two of them asked me a couple of questions and then suggested that I go to the emergency room immediately. At first I resisted, “It’ll be okay guys, I don’t need to go to the emergency room”. But they persisted. By now two or three more prior service folks had wandered into my room to see what all the fuss was over. Officer Candidate Special Forces (thus titled because he was formerly a SF Weapons Sergeant), in his very “as a matter of fact” way, pointed at my leg and said “If you let that get any worse, they are going to be digging out all of the flesh out of your leg there”. That was all that needed to be said.
I put on my PT uniform, enlisted a battle buddy with a car, got the ok from SFC Skinny, who was as aloof as ever, and I was off to the emergency room at 22:00 on a Saturday night. I was very thankful for Officer Candidate Darjeeling, who didn’t hesitate for even a second when I asked him to take me to the ER. It was going to be a 4 or 5 hour affair, we both knew. That is the way it is at a busy ER, if you’re lucky, in the middle of the night. It took us about a half hour to get there, as neither of us had ever been to the hospital before.
I signed in at the front desk with my military ID. About ten minutes later I was called into a diagnostics room where an extremely obese nurse took my vital signs, asked me the usual “Are you on any drugs, are you allergic to this or that” kind of questions. Then she sent me back out to the waiting room. It was a depressing scene out there. A couple of mothers with their ailing children, a spotting of depressed looking basic training soldiers, and a couple there with their adult, down syndrome daughter, who was sitting in a wheel chair with a rosary in her hand praying. I tired not to stare. I read an article about Eminem’s comeback album in Entertainment magazine. Officer Candidate Darjeeling was outside on the phone, probably with his wife, and I was glad. I was too tired and worried to carry on an interesting conversation. I just wanted to see a doctor, get some treatment and go back to the barracks and go to sleep.
Eventually I was called into the inspection room. I sat there alone, in solitary confinement, looking at the gurney in front of me. It made me think of my sister and her last visit to the emergency room, when she was going into anaphylactic shock and they had to rush her down the hallway on a gurney sticking needles and IVs in her on the way down. At least that’s the way my mother tells the story. Here I was miles from family and home and I was wondering why. The intellectual answer is always easy, but the gut is harder to read. Is it worth it? I asked myself. “I could be at home right now, lying in bed with Maya”. I sighed at the thought. I consoled myself that there was nothing about home that protected one from the displeasure of spider bites or hospital trips. I thought of my sister again as I looked back up at the gurney.
Suddenly the doctor entered the room. Right from the moment he entered, before I even turned my head to look at him directly, I saw that he was deformed. As I glanced up at him quickly I could tell right away he was the victim of a severe burn. All his hair was gone, his scalp and ears scarred. What was left of his ears, I should say. I tried not to stare; my eyes quickly darted down to his rank. He was a Major. He asked me what was going on and how he could help me. I showed him my leg and told him how the former medics in my platoon had told me that I needed immediate attention. He said that they had done me right. He started poking my “bite”, inspecting it and explaining that the surrounding redness was cellulitis. I forget what he said about the center, the technical term he used. His hands and arms, I noticed, were also scarred from some traumatic burn. It must have been a very painful experience. What was odd about him was that other than the burns, he was the perfect specimen of a man. He was tall, maybe 73 inches, broad shoulders, medium waist, muscular, with deep, penetrating blue eyes. No signs of weakness or pain, despite the clear evidence of this traumatic experience.
“So is it brown recluse bite?” I asked him in way that must have betrayed my confusion, because he almost laughed. He informed me that in fact my spider bite was not a spider bite at all, but was a soft tissue infection, probably provoked by an in-grown hair. I was even more confused now. What about the other “bites”, the ones that hadn’t blown up. His explanation was that these things tend to pop up in groups like that, when your immune function is compromised, or at least that is what I understood. He told me that there were two things he could do. He was going to put me on antibiotics, for sure, but he wasn’t sure if it was necessary to cut it open and drain it there. I have had a cyst lanced before and I know how painful it can be, so I wasn’t jumping at the idea, but the way my leg looked, I wasn’t against the idea either. It was under a lot of pressure. He decided, however, that it was unnecessary to drain it just then, but he wanted me to go to the TMC first thing Monday and get it checked out. And as suddenly as he had entered, he was gone.
I returned to my previous seat on the side of the room. It was already 12:30. I felt terrible about making Darjeeling wait. I owed the universe big for that kind of generosity. Getting sick or injured is humbling like that. I looked back down at the gurney in front of me and thought about the Major. He must have gotten those burns in combat. What if I got burns like those, would I be able to keep myself together, to continue on doing my job and living life? I suppose I wouldn’t have any choice. In my weariness I wondered if I would die before I saw my family again, if I was going to be becoming more intimate with the world of gurneys. Death sat there in the room with me, on that gurney, and I was not so much scared in that moment as I was dejected; upset to not have chosen to stay at home with my love. I was going to die in combat, I thought, and I would have spent the last year of my life without the one I love.
I got my antibiotics and we were back at the barracks by 2:00. We checked in with SFC Skinny and went to sleep. I thanked Darjeeling again for his invaluable generosity. He was cool about the whole thing. He is prior service and a good teammate and a good soldier. I owe him a great deal and am very thankful he is in my platoon. Aside from helping me in my moment of need, he is a very helpful and cheerful comrade. He is also very intelligent and able to talk politics and economics at a level that is rare in the Army. He reads the FT and the Economist. And he knows quite a bit of history, even though his Master’s is in Mathematics or Computer Science, I forget which one.
Sunday I laid real low and started my regime of antibiotics. I was a little disappointed, because I guess I was expecting the sort of immediate results we have become accustomed to expect with everything these days. My leg didn’t get any better. If anything the pain was getting more acute. I just spent most of the day sleeping, feeling sorry for myself, and reading The Battle of Mogadishu. Good book, nice to read because it is the account of that famous battle as told by like five or six of the guys who were there. Each one writes his own personal account of his experience of that chaotic day in Somalia, and so each account is self containing and it is easy to read one account, put the book down for a couple of days, as training might require and then pick it up again, without feeling out of sync. Anything was good to get me from counting the minutes until the TMC would open on Monday. I needed some pain-killers, or something. I needed this thing on my leg to stop growing. It was terribly frustrating. I hated being crippled and having to go to sick call.
Monday morning I went to sick hall and where I met with a civilian Physician’s Assistant who’s bedside manner was impeccable. He calmed me right down. He explained to me, however, that what I had was a MRSA Staph infection. I was taken back by that, because I have always heard of Staph as something rather serious. But his voice was calm and I was too, for the time being. He explained that the bacteria lives on our skin and normally doesn’t cause us any trouble, but that it can get into small cuts or in-grown hairs and can cause serious infections like the one I was suffering. He further explained that there were two treatment options I could choose from. I could keep taking the antibiotics, which would start to take affect in the next week and then it would take maybe 2 to 3 weeks for my body to completely drain itself of all the nasty stuff in the leg. Or they could cut my leg open drain the concentrated, blistered ball of puss in the center of my infection, irrigate it with a hydrogen peroxide solution and pack it with an anti-bacterial gauze. I would be back to normal, within a week. It didn’t take me long to decide. Given the pain I was in I was ready for the blade.
I won’t go into graphic detail about the operation. It was short and painless, thanks to the most powerful anesthetic I have ever used. The PA made an incision at the center of the infection, about an inch long, maybe a centimeter and a half deep and drained all the puss and blood that was filled there. He washed it out like he said he would and then packed the wound with medicated gauze that would wick out whatever bits of bacteria he hadn’t cut out. He sent me on my way with a prescription of non-narcotic pain killers and instructions to come back for the next couple of days to have the gauze removed, the wound washed and checked, and then repacked.
Almost immediately my leg started to feel better. It was still red and swelling across most of my left thigh, but a lot of the pressure had been relieved. I went to class and continued on with my day, feeling better, though perhaps still a bit dejected and apprehensive. I was worried about how long the wound would take to heel. I had a march coming up on Wednesday and a 3-mile release run on Friday that both counted towards the OML, where I am battling to stay in competition for a good branch selection. From 20:00 to 21:00 we had study barracks and instead studying my notes from class, I went online and started doing some research into Staph infections. This didn’t help. It seemed everything I read heavily stressed the serious health risks involved with a Staph infection. The PA had neglected to inform me that if it spreads to your lymph nodes and goes systemic it can be lethal. I felt light headed. I felt sick to my stomach.
At 21:15 I grabbed my cell phone and went to call Maya. In the eternal battle between the strong, sage, and sane self, and the weak, petty, and desperate self, I was losing. Here I was, calling my wife to unload on her all of my anxiety, my worries and fears. I knew it was wrong. It was unfair to her, who was so far away and could do nothing to help me. But I needed to let it out. I was scared. Scared of getting more sick than I already was, scared of being recycled out of Bravo company, scared of losing my spot at OCS. And Maya listened calmly as I shared with her all of my worst fears and pieces of self-pity. I whined “I am just upset that this had to happen to me right now while I am here in training, it is just so frustrating”. Maya sucked up all of my sickness, my festered spirit and breathed back into me the spirit of life I needed in my moment of despair. “Honey, all of the great people in history, the ones you admire, they weren’t great because they never had any trials, they were great because they worked through them. This is just one of your trials.” However simple, her words were true and they gave me the spiritual succor I needed.
In the past week my infection has almost completely subsided with the help of my antibiotics. My wound is also healing very quickly, though not as quickly as I would like, because I still have to go in everyday to get it cleaned and repacked. It shouldn’t be too much longer until they cut me loose, maybe another 4 or 5 days. Everyday is a pain though, because I keep missing PT every morning and I feel like I am falling behind my peers. It is an awful feeling, but one I try to keep in perspective. I missed the 5-mile march and the 3-mile release run last week, but I will be able to make those up without penalty. I just want to get better as soon as I can so I can get back to training. I am here to train and it is a very humbling and frustrating experience to be on the sidelines when all you want to do is get in the game.
I owe a much thanks and praise at the end of a long week to all my battle buddies who have helped me and cared for me in a hundred different ways, to my wife who is my rock, my foundation and my well of wisdom, to Mark Bauer and Joe Gordon who have been a source of support for me throughout some of my darkest moments in my training, and to my Lord Jesus Christ. Above all I try to remember that I am fortunate to be alive, that each pain is a blessing in this world and that I owe nothing but praise to my Maker, the Almighty.
Tuesday, May 26, 2009
Captain Mac and Bravo Company
Sunday, May 17, 2009
Branching
The way it works here at Army OCS, there are some of us coming in who already have our branch slots guaranteed and others of us who have yet to select our specific Officer job. The in-service candidates and the reservists all already know what job they will have when they are done with OCS. All other college options, even those with a prior service record in the Army, must wait until week 6 of the course to know what they will be doing for at least the next three years in the Army. I fall into the latter group, so at the moment I don’t know if I am going to be a Field Artillery Officer, a Quartermaster Officer, or an Infantry Officer. There are 10 or 12 different jobs that I could possibly end up with at the end of the next 6 weeks.
Which of those jobs you got used to be almost completely out of your control. Your future was determined by your cadre and the Army’s Human Resources Command (HRC), with a cursory consideration of a wish list that you filled out at the beginning of the course. Now we candidates have a great deal of more control over our own fate, using the Order of Merit List (OML). Basically every aspect of the course is weighted and graded, from leadership, to the physical fitness, from the tests to the confidence course, and all those points are tallied up by the cadre and used to create the OML, which lists all candidates in the class in order of performance from first to last.
Currently the OML system for branching is used so that college option candidates can choose their own branch from those available. It starts with HRC, which supplies the cadre with a list of all of the branch slots it needs filled. There may be 6 Infantry slots, 8 Military Intelligence slots, 4 Armor slots, 25 Ordinance slots and on and so forth for all the various branch slots. Then all the cadre does when it comes time for the candidates to branch in week six is give the list to the class and let them choose from what’s available, based on the OML. So the top-performing candidate in the class gets his or her pick of the litter. The candidate at the end of the OML gets to choose only from what is left after everyone else has already had their pick. So the higher up you are on the OML, the greater the chance you have of getting your top choice of job. It therefore behooves every candidate to perform at high a level as possible.
On Tuesday we have our first and possibly most important event that counts towards the OML: the initial Army Physical Fitness Test (APFT). This event will make or break many peoples aspirations to get branched into one of those high speed, competitive jobs like Infantry or MI. Maxing out your APFT at 300 would clearly set you out in the top ten or fifteen percent of the OML from the start. Shanking it with a 240 could leave you eating dust all cycle long. Clearly Tuesday’s APFT is very important. I am hoping to get a 300, which would be a 30 point improvement on my last score. I only need to get 8 more sit ups and 6 more push ups to max out those events. The run is going to be the harder nut to crack, where I need to drop a minute off of my two mile. It’s doable, but I am really going to have to book it. My plan is just to run until I throw up, and then keep on running more.
I cannot yet say for sure what my first choice for a branch will be, but I want to give myself every possible opportunity when we get to week 6. In fact the question of which branch would be best for me is something that has been on my mind almost constantly since I began my training over two months ago. Before I entered the military, I imagined myself going Infantry all the way. Airborne, Ranger, the whole nine yards. But that is a much easier thing to intellectualize than to actually do, something that began to dawn as me as experienced some of the milder privations of basic training, which is a vacation compared to Ranger school, or a 12 month deployment as a PL in a light Infantry unit. Now, to add to my own reservations, I have discovered that, in fact, Infantry is one of the most competitive branches to get. While I hope to be in the top 30 or 20 percent of the class, there is no guarantee I’ll get the chance to pick Infantry. There may only be 4 or 5 slots for the entire class.
At the moment I am in no particular rush to make up my mind one way or the other about Infantry. I still have six weeks before I need to make a final decision on the matter. The question that is more gnawing in my mind is whether or not to go for a combat arms branch, because I will most certainly be able to get branched into one of those if I want. All the way back since the time of the Roman legions, the attack force of an Army has been made up of three major components: Infantry, Artillery, and Cavalry. The forms have evolved, but the basic components and their relationship with one another have remained fairly constant for a couple thousand years. I feel as though I should immerse myself into that Warrior tradition, that I should branch Infantry, Armor, or Artillery, in order to “answer that eternal question”, as Matt Eversmann puts it in his chapter of The Battle of Mogadishu.
There are many reasons why one would want to avoid branching into combat arms: it’s hard on your body, it’s dangerous, it’s difficult for your family. It is an all around dirty job, a savage job. But at the end of the day all the logistics and strategy in the world won’t mean a thing without someone to execute the violence, to kill and to put their own necks out on the line. I dread the experience of being shot at or being hit by a combined arms ambush; I do not doubt the strength of the Taliban. But I nonetheless feel as though this is the war of our lifetime and I want tot be a part of it. I want to go and put my boots onto the soil of Afghanistan and Iraq. I want to be in the middle of the action, to see the real war, rather than sit on a FOB somewhere and count munitions. As an Officer, one has their whole career to do logistics. I want to have my time as a tactical operator.
In all likelihood I will swallow my doubts and jump into the unknown world of combat arms, when all is said and done. I will do it for all the reasons I have written above. It is, nonetheless, a tough decision; tough precisely for the fact that I cannot be sure I am doing the right thing. I believe I am doing what is right.
For now I am happy to be here, at Ft. Benning and I am excited for the course to begin in a couple of days. I am hopeful to improve my PT test and to tackle everything I can with as much alacrity and ferocity as I can muster each day. I look forward to learning as much as I can about the three major combat arms branches: Artillery, Armor, and Infantry. And in six weeks I am sure I will be as ready as I am going to be to make one of the toughest decisions of my life. In all of this, I have neglected to mention that I would not even be able to consider any of these options if it were not for the sincere and undying support of my wife. I owe her forever for that compassion and generosity.
