Hello, all-
As evidenced by the above title, I am indeed back into the blogging world. Will I stay? Good question. Hopefully, yes. We shall see as time goes on . . .
I'm adding a couple of new, "pages within a page" to the blog: 'Recently Read Books' and 'Books I Am Reading.' I don't know how to do all the fancy HTML-Java-whatever to create a seperate page entity, so I'm going to create these two pages as posts, link them on the right-hand side of the screen under "Archived Posts by Subject," and update them concurrently with what I am reading and have read.
Anyway, I'm going to go create those posts . . . God bless, and I will talk to you all later.
Duty, Strength, and Honor -
Johnson
"The glory of young men is their strength . . ."
- Proverbs 20:29a
- Proverbs 20:29a
Thursday, August 7, 2008
Saturday, December 15, 2007
What it takes to make me post:
A free drawing for food.
To explain -
When our family had the privilege of attending Vision Forum's Jamestown Quad Celebration in June, we met several fine families. One of these was the Tim Alexander clan.
My sisters "keep up with" both their family blog and the eldest daughter's blog, and brought this drawing to my attention. Basically, anybody who leaves a comment on a certain post has their name entered; anybody who leaves a link to Meredith's blog has their name entered twice. So . . . I am posting a link to her blog.
Meredith's Blog
Here's to sugar-coated peanuts, chocolate clusters, and peanut brittle.
Strong Work, gentlemen.
Johnson
To explain -
When our family had the privilege of attending Vision Forum's Jamestown Quad Celebration in June, we met several fine families. One of these was the Tim Alexander clan.
My sisters "keep up with" both their family blog and the eldest daughter's blog, and brought this drawing to my attention. Basically, anybody who leaves a comment on a certain post has their name entered; anybody who leaves a link to Meredith's blog has their name entered twice. So . . . I am posting a link to her blog.
Meredith's Blog
Here's to sugar-coated peanuts, chocolate clusters, and peanut brittle.
Strong Work, gentlemen.
Johnson
Sunday, December 2, 2007
Happy Birthday Johnson!
Hello to all of Y'all!
Johnson's younger sister here. This past Tuesday,(Nov. 27) our dear older brother turned 18! Wow! Eighteen is such a "big" number. It is hard to believe that Johns is already eighteen. I remember when we were younger, how grown up and old eighteen seemed to be. We knew some folks who were that age, and we really looked up to them. We can really have an influence on those who are younger than us! One of the Moms at our church wrote Johnson a note, and in the note she told him what an influence he has had on her oldest son who is thirteen. "Let no one despise your youth, but be an example to the believers in word, in conduct, in love, in spirit, in faith, in purity." ~1 Timothy 4:12
On Johnson's birthday, Daddy took us all out to eat at Cracker Barrel. Dad was going to try to surprise Johns, and have Bryan and Erika Stewart meet us at the restaurant, but Johns has pretty good hearing, and accidentally overheard Dad talking to Bryan! Bryan and Erika gave Johnson a picture frame with a photo collage from this year's Challenge. It is just beautiful! Daddy gave Johnson a 12 gauge shotgun; he actually got it early and shot skeet with it at our grandparent's farm. Johns said it was "sweet."
Johnson hopes to watch a movie(or something like that) for his birthday. He wasn't able to earlier because he had a test yesterday-he actually studied on his birthday! Poor fellow.
Johnson is such a wonderful older brother to us! He is striving to honor, serve, and be a blessing unto our Lord Most High.
"Happy is the man who finds wisdom, and the man who gains understanding; For her proceeds are better than the profits of silver, and her gain than fine gold. She is more precious than rubies, and all the things you may desire cannot compare with her. Length of days is in her right hand, in her left hand riches and honor. Her ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace. She is a tree of life to those who take hold of her, and happy are all who retain her." ~Proverbs 3:13-18
We love you very much Johnson!
The Lord be with you all,
Jeri Beth Hardy
"When life gives you lemons, put 'em in your sweet tea, and thank God you're a Southern girl!"
--------
Howdy, to one and all who are on this Blog!
We are very proud of Johnson.
He is such a wonderful older brother to me and my older siblings.
I wrote this to Johnson in his card from Dean and me:
"For my wonderful brother Johnson, Happy Birthday!
Johns, six things I like about you:
1: You're always calm.
2: You are very manly.
3: You are such a wonderful brother.
4: You dress like a man.
5: You are very protective.
6: You are a leader, and
I love you very much,
(as you call me)
~The Babe~
~Mary Pate Hardy
Johnson's younger sister here. This past Tuesday,(Nov. 27) our dear older brother turned 18! Wow! Eighteen is such a "big" number. It is hard to believe that Johns is already eighteen. I remember when we were younger, how grown up and old eighteen seemed to be. We knew some folks who were that age, and we really looked up to them. We can really have an influence on those who are younger than us! One of the Moms at our church wrote Johnson a note, and in the note she told him what an influence he has had on her oldest son who is thirteen. "Let no one despise your youth, but be an example to the believers in word, in conduct, in love, in spirit, in faith, in purity." ~1 Timothy 4:12
On Johnson's birthday, Daddy took us all out to eat at Cracker Barrel. Dad was going to try to surprise Johns, and have Bryan and Erika Stewart meet us at the restaurant, but Johns has pretty good hearing, and accidentally overheard Dad talking to Bryan! Bryan and Erika gave Johnson a picture frame with a photo collage from this year's Challenge. It is just beautiful! Daddy gave Johnson a 12 gauge shotgun; he actually got it early and shot skeet with it at our grandparent's farm. Johns said it was "sweet."
Johnson hopes to watch a movie(or something like that) for his birthday. He wasn't able to earlier because he had a test yesterday-he actually studied on his birthday! Poor fellow.
Johnson is such a wonderful older brother to us! He is striving to honor, serve, and be a blessing unto our Lord Most High.
"Happy is the man who finds wisdom, and the man who gains understanding; For her proceeds are better than the profits of silver, and her gain than fine gold. She is more precious than rubies, and all the things you may desire cannot compare with her. Length of days is in her right hand, in her left hand riches and honor. Her ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace. She is a tree of life to those who take hold of her, and happy are all who retain her." ~Proverbs 3:13-18
We love you very much Johnson!
The Lord be with you all,
Jeri Beth Hardy
"When life gives you lemons, put 'em in your sweet tea, and thank God you're a Southern girl!"
--------
Howdy, to one and all who are on this Blog!
We are very proud of Johnson.
He is such a wonderful older brother to me and my older siblings.
I wrote this to Johnson in his card from Dean and me:
"For my wonderful brother Johnson, Happy Birthday!
Johns, six things I like about you:
1: You're always calm.
2: You are very manly.
3: You are such a wonderful brother.
4: You dress like a man.
5: You are very protective.
6: You are a leader, and
I love you very much,
(as you call me)
~The Babe~
~Mary Pate Hardy
Monday, November 12, 2007
MY MASTER
I had walked life’s pathways with an easy tread,
Had followed where comfort and pleasure led;
And then by chance in a quiet place
I met my Master, face to face.
With station and rank and wealth for a goal,
Much thought for the body, but none for the soul,
I had entered to win in life’s mad race,
When I met my Master face to face.
I had built my castles and reared them high,
‘Till there towers had pierced the blue of the sky;
I sworn to rule with an iron mace,
When I met my Master face to face.
I met Him and knew Him and blushed to see,
That His eyes, full of sorrows, were fixed on me;
And I faltered and I fell at His feet that day,
While my castles melted and vanished away.
Melted and vanished, and in their place
I saw naught else but my Master’s face;
And I cried aloud, “O, make me meet
To follow the marks of Thy wounded feet!”
My thought is now for the souls of men.
I have lost my life to find it again,
E’er since alone in that holy place
My Master and I stood face to face.
- Unknown
Had followed where comfort and pleasure led;
And then by chance in a quiet place
I met my Master, face to face.
With station and rank and wealth for a goal,
Much thought for the body, but none for the soul,
I had entered to win in life’s mad race,
When I met my Master face to face.
I had built my castles and reared them high,
‘Till there towers had pierced the blue of the sky;
I sworn to rule with an iron mace,
When I met my Master face to face.
I met Him and knew Him and blushed to see,
That His eyes, full of sorrows, were fixed on me;
And I faltered and I fell at His feet that day,
While my castles melted and vanished away.
Melted and vanished, and in their place
I saw naught else but my Master’s face;
And I cried aloud, “O, make me meet
To follow the marks of Thy wounded feet!”
My thought is now for the souls of men.
I have lost my life to find it again,
E’er since alone in that holy place
My Master and I stood face to face.
- Unknown
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
I would not D.O.R.
The following was originally posted by my dear friend Bryan Stewart on his blog, Flyin’ Bryan. Since Bryan has not posted on his blog since 2005, and only posted a grand total of four or five times to begin with, I have secured permission from him to re-post all of his “good stuff” here, where perhaps the audience will be a bit greater than before. This will be the first of three articles from Bryan’s blog. If you like what you read, leave a comment - he’ll read it when he checks this page.
I drove home from meetings in North Carolina today, and as I did I thought about quitting. No, not quitting; just about those who have quit or ever gave up. It reminded me of a time several years ago when I wanted to quit. The towel was in my hand ready to be thrown. I was in Israel working on a communal farm near Jerusalem. The circumstances are not important now, in fact I hardly remember what they were to be quite honest. What I do remember is a letter my Dad wrote me via e-mail that changed me. After reading his letter I put the towel away and squared my shoulders into my adversity. I am grateful for that letter and his wisdom and I want to produce part of it here for those who have quit, or who are close. This is for you . . .
“HERE IS MY TALE:
It is sometime in the year 1971 and a 21
year old wet behind the ears young man reads a
letter from the draft board that said something like
this:
"Dear Mr. John W Stewart, Jr, Greetings. Your selective
service draft number of 34 qualifies you for
induction in the Armed Services of these United States
and upon completion of your undergraduate studies, you will
be drafted into whichever branch of the services has need
at that time. If you have any questions, please feel free
to contact our office.....etc."
A junior in college with thoughts of going to Vet school
but faced with the specter of war as Viet Nam was still
in full battle with many U.S. casualties requiring fresh
troops. The second letter arrived informing me that I was
to be in New Orleans later in the year for a pre-draft
physical; I passed it. Sometime during the fall semester
at Mississippi State, the US Navy set up a display about
Naval Air and I stopped to chat with the two Lt's who manned
the booth. One thing led to another and I began the battery
of tests to determine my aptitude as a pilot.
It is February, 1972 and I raise my hand in a courthouse
room in Jackson, Mississippi and swear to uphold a
commitment to the United States Navy and enter that same
year after graduation into OCS at Pensacola, Florida.
I remember the odd feeling in the pit of my gut for with
all the glamour there was that same specter of war with the
resultant carnage.
Graduation came in May of that year and I spent the summer
helping lay brick for part of the summer and training
horses the remaining time for a guy in Hattiesburg. The 36th
week of the year I walked through the gates of Mainside and
presented myself for active service at the OCS Indoctrination
building. I was fit and ready to take on the world. The world
exploded in the shape of one mean spirited Marine DI named SSgt
Delaney. I was in my room with 2 other recent college grads and
one Army Sergeant who wanted to fly. I could hear screaming and
cursing as Delaney made his way toward our end of the building.
Bodies were slammed against the wall, others were pushed back
through portals (door ways) and others were doing pushups
beyond their abilities. He went to the room across from
ours and I stared as I saw one young man do 100 pushups
out of pure fear. Delaney looked into our room, cursed
and made his way back down the passage way (hall). He then
proceeded to tell about 40 or so uncertain young men who
were thankfully out of his sight in about 10 rooms what
he would do with us for the next 3-4 months; it was not
pleasant. He said many of us would quit and go back to mama.
He said some might even die and all would wish they had.
He went on with more than I can remember.
I had many thoughts that night, even of quitting for they
said if we wanted to quit all we had to do was say three
little letters -- D O R. That stood for Drop On Request
and when you did, you were quietly and quickly ushered
out the door, given your belongings and your papers home.
I never could spell very well so I opted to not show my
ignorance and get the sequence wrong by saying something
like ORD or ROD! The Army Sergeant said that the training
would be hard but to hang in there for it would be worth it.
I thought he was nuts -- he was not after all. However, I
watched from my window one day as this same Army Sergeant
slowly limped down the street, away from the battalion
toward the office that held his papers -- Delaney had broken
him.
The physics test came back with a failing grade. I was held
back a week in Indoc and had to take the tests over again.
I joined class 37-72 after Indoc and SSgt Perry was our DI.
Our Indoc DI was a little short Marine who had a funny
sounding voice but was tougher than nails. He was tough
until the specter of Viet Nam flooded his mind one too many
times and that toughness ended in the front seat of a
fellow Marine’s borrowed station wagon as he took his own
life. These college grads were beginning to see a side of
life that had been hidden from their view.
Battalion II, class 37-72 and I am one of about 30 other
young men. Some want to fly F-4s, some have bad eye sight
and will settle into the back seats of F-4s or the right
seat of an A-6. All being trained to obey, all being
transformed from college grads to Naval Officers. What are
those initials again? DOR? Yes, and some voiced them to
our Lt. only to find themselves packing their things and
obtaining their papers from that office. Did I feel like
it, yes. Did I, no. I could not quit something
I had started, this was too important to me. I wanted to
fly . . . I wanted to fight if need be . . . I wanted to
patrol the oceans for submarines and gain valuable hours
in the air. I would not DOR.
The philosophy of the DI is this. Treat the men that
will one day lead men in a way that is opposite of
how they should lead. So, if one man in the class broke
a rule then the entire class was punished. If one man
failed inspection, the whole class failed the inspection.
Some want to fly F-4s, some have bad eye sight and will
settle into the back seats of F-4s or the right seat of
an A-6. All being trained to obey, all being transformed
from college grads to Naval Officers. What are those
initials again? DOR? Yes, and some voiced them to our Lt.
only to find themselves packing their things and obtaining
their papers from that office. Did I feel like it, yes.
Did I, no. I could not quit something I had started, this
was too important to me. I wanted to fly . . . I wanted to
fight if need be . . . I wanted to patrol the oceans for
submarines and gain valuable hours in the air. I would not
DOR.
Sea course, obstacle course, latrine duty, guard duty,
study, training, marching, running, screaming, competition,
cursed at by the DI, made to feel that you have no value,
made to wonder if this was reality, doubting your self, not
knowing how to call upon God, not knowing if you would make
it, challenged way past what you had ever done, trying to
remember all of the rules, trying not to break any rule . . .
the list could continue. The fear of failing an exam, the
fear of failing your eye exam, the fear of failing your hearing
exam, the fear of failing your psychology exam, the fear of
not saluting the right way, the fear of your locker and rack
not being in order, the fear of letting down your classmates,
the fear of quitting and the fear of what the next day held.
Some want to fly F-4s, some have bad eye sight and will settle
into the back seats of F-4s or the right seat of an A-6.
All being trained to obey, all being transformed from college
grads to Naval Officers. What are those initials again? DOR?
Yes, and some voiced them to our Lt. only to find themselves
packing their things and obtaining their papers from that
office. Did I feel like it, yes. Did I, no. I could not quit
something I had started, this was too important to me. I wanted
to fly . . . I wanted to fight if need be . . . I wanted to
patrol the oceans for submarines and gain valuable hours in
the air. I would not DOR.
Slowly, we took shape as a class. Slowly we took shape
as individuals. Slowly we made the transformation from
college graduates to officers. Slowly the change came
upon us and we one day realized we would make it and
DOR would not spill from our lips. We had grown through
the struggles . . . the cocoon containing the caterpillar
split open to yield the butterfly . . . but the struggle
was not over - as the butterfly has to struggle to force
the fluids through the veins in its wings, so we had to
struggle a bit more.
The time came when the young men who were to fly where
shipped to Saufley field and the ones who were to navigate
and guide weapons were moved to another barracks on Mainside.
A new set of struggles as the pressure to fail was waived
over our heads for those initials were still valid and could
still be uttered. There were no gold bars on our collars at
this point and DOR would yield us our civilian clothes and
our papers and a trip back home. Some want to fly F-4s,
some have bad eye sight and will settle into the back seats
of F-4s or the right seat of an A-6. All being trained to
obey, all being transformed from college grads to Naval Officers.
What are those initials again? DOR? Yes, and some voiced them
to our Lt. only to find themselves packing their things and
obtaining their papers from that office. Did I feel like it,
yes. Did I, no. I could not quit something I had started,
this was too important to me. I wanted to fly . . . I wanted
to fight if need be . . . I wanted to patrol the oceans
for submarines and gain valuable hours in the air. I would not
DOR.
Those letters seemed to float around the base more for one
by one, young men voiced them and were seen no more.
"Pensacola Pressure Cooker" was what one person described
this place as being -- I agreed. Memorization led to testing,
flights had to be by the book or the book was thrown at you.
The margin of error was slight and many young men stepped
into that margin only to find themselves gathering their
things and receiving their papers for home.
A Navy Captain stood as I turned to face him and receive
my graduation papers and had a single gold bar pinned to
my collar. SSgt Perry stood outside, was the first to
salute me, I returned the salute, shook his hand and
passed a silver dollar to him and thanked him. He turned as
only a Marine can turn and walked away to pick up another class
of college grads who wanted to fly.
Now, what are those letters . . . that is right, you have
forgotten them as well.”
I drove home from meetings in North Carolina today, and as I did I thought about quitting. No, not quitting; just about those who have quit or ever gave up. It reminded me of a time several years ago when I wanted to quit. The towel was in my hand ready to be thrown. I was in Israel working on a communal farm near Jerusalem. The circumstances are not important now, in fact I hardly remember what they were to be quite honest. What I do remember is a letter my Dad wrote me via e-mail that changed me. After reading his letter I put the towel away and squared my shoulders into my adversity. I am grateful for that letter and his wisdom and I want to produce part of it here for those who have quit, or who are close. This is for you . . .
“HERE IS MY TALE:
It is sometime in the year 1971 and a 21
year old wet behind the ears young man reads a
letter from the draft board that said something like
this:
"Dear Mr. John W Stewart, Jr, Greetings. Your selective
service draft number of 34 qualifies you for
induction in the Armed Services of these United States
and upon completion of your undergraduate studies, you will
be drafted into whichever branch of the services has need
at that time. If you have any questions, please feel free
to contact our office.....etc."
A junior in college with thoughts of going to Vet school
but faced with the specter of war as Viet Nam was still
in full battle with many U.S. casualties requiring fresh
troops. The second letter arrived informing me that I was
to be in New Orleans later in the year for a pre-draft
physical; I passed it. Sometime during the fall semester
at Mississippi State, the US Navy set up a display about
Naval Air and I stopped to chat with the two Lt's who manned
the booth. One thing led to another and I began the battery
of tests to determine my aptitude as a pilot.
It is February, 1972 and I raise my hand in a courthouse
room in Jackson, Mississippi and swear to uphold a
commitment to the United States Navy and enter that same
year after graduation into OCS at Pensacola, Florida.
I remember the odd feeling in the pit of my gut for with
all the glamour there was that same specter of war with the
resultant carnage.
Graduation came in May of that year and I spent the summer
helping lay brick for part of the summer and training
horses the remaining time for a guy in Hattiesburg. The 36th
week of the year I walked through the gates of Mainside and
presented myself for active service at the OCS Indoctrination
building. I was fit and ready to take on the world. The world
exploded in the shape of one mean spirited Marine DI named SSgt
Delaney. I was in my room with 2 other recent college grads and
one Army Sergeant who wanted to fly. I could hear screaming and
cursing as Delaney made his way toward our end of the building.
Bodies were slammed against the wall, others were pushed back
through portals (door ways) and others were doing pushups
beyond their abilities. He went to the room across from
ours and I stared as I saw one young man do 100 pushups
out of pure fear. Delaney looked into our room, cursed
and made his way back down the passage way (hall). He then
proceeded to tell about 40 or so uncertain young men who
were thankfully out of his sight in about 10 rooms what
he would do with us for the next 3-4 months; it was not
pleasant. He said many of us would quit and go back to mama.
He said some might even die and all would wish they had.
He went on with more than I can remember.
I had many thoughts that night, even of quitting for they
said if we wanted to quit all we had to do was say three
little letters -- D O R. That stood for Drop On Request
and when you did, you were quietly and quickly ushered
out the door, given your belongings and your papers home.
I never could spell very well so I opted to not show my
ignorance and get the sequence wrong by saying something
like ORD or ROD! The Army Sergeant said that the training
would be hard but to hang in there for it would be worth it.
I thought he was nuts -- he was not after all. However, I
watched from my window one day as this same Army Sergeant
slowly limped down the street, away from the battalion
toward the office that held his papers -- Delaney had broken
him.
The physics test came back with a failing grade. I was held
back a week in Indoc and had to take the tests over again.
I joined class 37-72 after Indoc and SSgt Perry was our DI.
Our Indoc DI was a little short Marine who had a funny
sounding voice but was tougher than nails. He was tough
until the specter of Viet Nam flooded his mind one too many
times and that toughness ended in the front seat of a
fellow Marine’s borrowed station wagon as he took his own
life. These college grads were beginning to see a side of
life that had been hidden from their view.
Battalion II, class 37-72 and I am one of about 30 other
young men. Some want to fly F-4s, some have bad eye sight
and will settle into the back seats of F-4s or the right
seat of an A-6. All being trained to obey, all being
transformed from college grads to Naval Officers. What are
those initials again? DOR? Yes, and some voiced them to
our Lt. only to find themselves packing their things and
obtaining their papers from that office. Did I feel like
it, yes. Did I, no. I could not quit something
I had started, this was too important to me. I wanted to
fly . . . I wanted to fight if need be . . . I wanted to
patrol the oceans for submarines and gain valuable hours
in the air. I would not DOR.
The philosophy of the DI is this. Treat the men that
will one day lead men in a way that is opposite of
how they should lead. So, if one man in the class broke
a rule then the entire class was punished. If one man
failed inspection, the whole class failed the inspection.
Some want to fly F-4s, some have bad eye sight and will
settle into the back seats of F-4s or the right seat of
an A-6. All being trained to obey, all being transformed
from college grads to Naval Officers. What are those
initials again? DOR? Yes, and some voiced them to our Lt.
only to find themselves packing their things and obtaining
their papers from that office. Did I feel like it, yes.
Did I, no. I could not quit something I had started, this
was too important to me. I wanted to fly . . . I wanted to
fight if need be . . . I wanted to patrol the oceans for
submarines and gain valuable hours in the air. I would not
DOR.
Sea course, obstacle course, latrine duty, guard duty,
study, training, marching, running, screaming, competition,
cursed at by the DI, made to feel that you have no value,
made to wonder if this was reality, doubting your self, not
knowing how to call upon God, not knowing if you would make
it, challenged way past what you had ever done, trying to
remember all of the rules, trying not to break any rule . . .
the list could continue. The fear of failing an exam, the
fear of failing your eye exam, the fear of failing your hearing
exam, the fear of failing your psychology exam, the fear of
not saluting the right way, the fear of your locker and rack
not being in order, the fear of letting down your classmates,
the fear of quitting and the fear of what the next day held.
Some want to fly F-4s, some have bad eye sight and will settle
into the back seats of F-4s or the right seat of an A-6.
All being trained to obey, all being transformed from college
grads to Naval Officers. What are those initials again? DOR?
Yes, and some voiced them to our Lt. only to find themselves
packing their things and obtaining their papers from that
office. Did I feel like it, yes. Did I, no. I could not quit
something I had started, this was too important to me. I wanted
to fly . . . I wanted to fight if need be . . . I wanted to
patrol the oceans for submarines and gain valuable hours in
the air. I would not DOR.
Slowly, we took shape as a class. Slowly we took shape
as individuals. Slowly we made the transformation from
college graduates to officers. Slowly the change came
upon us and we one day realized we would make it and
DOR would not spill from our lips. We had grown through
the struggles . . . the cocoon containing the caterpillar
split open to yield the butterfly . . . but the struggle
was not over - as the butterfly has to struggle to force
the fluids through the veins in its wings, so we had to
struggle a bit more.
The time came when the young men who were to fly where
shipped to Saufley field and the ones who were to navigate
and guide weapons were moved to another barracks on Mainside.
A new set of struggles as the pressure to fail was waived
over our heads for those initials were still valid and could
still be uttered. There were no gold bars on our collars at
this point and DOR would yield us our civilian clothes and
our papers and a trip back home. Some want to fly F-4s,
some have bad eye sight and will settle into the back seats
of F-4s or the right seat of an A-6. All being trained to
obey, all being transformed from college grads to Naval Officers.
What are those initials again? DOR? Yes, and some voiced them
to our Lt. only to find themselves packing their things and
obtaining their papers from that office. Did I feel like it,
yes. Did I, no. I could not quit something I had started,
this was too important to me. I wanted to fly . . . I wanted
to fight if need be . . . I wanted to patrol the oceans
for submarines and gain valuable hours in the air. I would not
DOR.
Those letters seemed to float around the base more for one
by one, young men voiced them and were seen no more.
"Pensacola Pressure Cooker" was what one person described
this place as being -- I agreed. Memorization led to testing,
flights had to be by the book or the book was thrown at you.
The margin of error was slight and many young men stepped
into that margin only to find themselves gathering their
things and receiving their papers for home.
A Navy Captain stood as I turned to face him and receive
my graduation papers and had a single gold bar pinned to
my collar. SSgt Perry stood outside, was the first to
salute me, I returned the salute, shook his hand and
passed a silver dollar to him and thanked him. He turned as
only a Marine can turn and walked away to pick up another class
of college grads who wanted to fly.
Now, what are those letters . . . that is right, you have
forgotten them as well.”
Saturday, October 27, 2007
The Boy We Want
A boy that is truthful and honest
And faithful and willing to work;
But we have not a place that we care to disgrace
With a boy that is ready to shirk.
Wanted - a boy you can tie to,
A boy that is trusty and true,
A boy that is good to old people,
And kind to the little ones too.
A boy that is nice to the home folks,
And pleasant to sister and brother,
A boy who will try when things go awry
To be helpful to father and mother.
These are the boys we depend on -
Our hope for the future, and then
Grave problems of state and the world’s work await
Such boys when they grow to be men.
- Unknown
And faithful and willing to work;
But we have not a place that we care to disgrace
With a boy that is ready to shirk.
Wanted - a boy you can tie to,
A boy that is trusty and true,
A boy that is good to old people,
And kind to the little ones too.
A boy that is nice to the home folks,
And pleasant to sister and brother,
A boy who will try when things go awry
To be helpful to father and mother.
These are the boys we depend on -
Our hope for the future, and then
Grave problems of state and the world’s work await
Such boys when they grow to be men.
- Unknown
Friday, October 19, 2007
Rules of Engagment
Hello, all.
The following contains, for the most part, nothing of any real significance. Just so y'all know, the purpose of this blog is not to post amusing nothings such as this post. Generally (not always), I will try to write articles of substance. However, even The Preacher (at least, the fella we believe to have been The Preacher) extols the value of a good laugh . . . so fear not that my humble journal will be entirely devoid of humor. Those of you who know me fairly well can attest to this, I am certain.
There are dozens of these sets of "ROEs" out there - this is my personal collection. Hope you fellows enjoy them.
Murphy’s Rules of Combat
(a.k.a. Combat For Dummies)
1. “If the enemy is in range, so are you.” --Infantry Journal
2. Incoming fire has the right of way.
3. Don't look conspicuous: it draws fire (see 11., below).
4. The easy way is always mined.
5. “Try to look unimportant; the enemy may be low on ammo” --Infantry Journal
6. Professionals are predictable - it's the amateurs that are dangerous.
7. The enemy invariably attacks on one of two occasions:
a. When you're ready for them.
b. When you're not ready for them.
Or
a. when they're ready
b. when you're not.
8. Teamwork is essential - it gives the enemy someone else to shoot at.
9. If you can't remember, the claymore is pointed toward from you.
10. If your attack appears to be going really well for once, it’s an ambush.
11. "Don't draw fire; it irritates the people around you." --Infantry Journal
12. The only thing more accurate than incoming enemy fire is incoming friendly fire.
13. “When the pin is pulled, Mr. Grenade is not our friend.” --U.S. Marine Corps
14. If it's stupid but works, it ain’t stupid.
15. When in doubt, empty the magazine.
16. Never share a fox hole with anyone braver than yourself.
17. Anything you do can get you shot. Including, doing nothing.
18. Make it too tough for the enemy to get in, and you can't get out.
19. Mines are equal opportunity weapons.
20. A Purple Heart just proves that were you smart enough to think of a plan, dumb enough to try it, and lucky enough to survive.
21. Don't ever be the first, don't ever be the last and NEVER, EVER volunteer to do anything.
22. The quartermaster has only two sizes: too large and too small.
23. “Five second fuses [are guaranteed to] last three seconds.” --Infantry Journal
24. You are not Superman (Marines and fighter pilots take note).
25. A sucking chest wound is Nature's way of telling you to slow down.
26. If at first you don't succeed, call in an airstrike.
27. If you are forward of your position, your artillery will fall short.
28. Never forget that your weapon was made by the lowest bidder.
29. The enemy diversion you're ignoring is their main attack.
30. No OPLAN ever survives initial contact.
31. There is no such thing as a perfect plan.
32. There is no such thing as an atheist in a foxhole.
33. A retreating enemy is probably just falling back and regrouping
34. Friendly fire - ain’t.
35. Recoilless rifles - aren't.
36. Suppressive fires - won't.
37. Protective fire - don't.
38. Perfect plans - aren't.
39. The important things are always simple.
40. The simple things are always hard.
41. If you're short of everything except the enemy, you're in combat.
42. No combat-ready unit has ever passed inspection.
43. No inspection-ready unit has ever passed combat.
44. Radios will fail as soon as you need fire support.
45. When both sides are convinced that they are about to lose ... they are both right.
46. All weather close support doesn't work in bad weather.
47. The bursting radius of a grenade is always one foot greater than your jumping range.
48. The only terrain that is truly controlled is the terrain upon which you are standing.
49. The law of the bayonet says the man with the bullet wins.
50. The best tank killer is another tank. Therefore tanks are always fighting each other ...& have no time to help the infantry.
51. Precision bombing is normally accurate to within +/- one mile (...or so).
52. “Cluster bombing from B-52s is very, very accurate. The bombs are guaranteed to always hit the ground.” --USAF Ammo Troop
53. The side with the fanciest uniforms loses.
54. Armored vehicles are bullet magnets; a moving foxhole that attracts attention.
55. No plan survives the first few seconds of combat.
56. Expending material in combat is easier than filling out Graves Registration forms -- Ammo is cheap; your life isn't.
57. Just because you can't see the enemy; don't for a minute believe they can't see you.
58. When you have secured an area, don't forget to tell the enemy.
59. "Aim towards the enemy." --Instruction printed on U.S. Rocket Launcher
60. "A slipping gear could let your M-203 grenade launcher fire when you least expect it. That would make you quite unpopular in what's left of your unit." --Army's magazine of prevention maintenance
61. "It is generally inadvisable to eject directly over the area you just bombed." --U.S. Air Force manual
62. "Tracers work both ways." --U.S. Army Ordnance
63. "Any ship can be a minesweeper....once." --Anon
64. "Never tell the platoon sergeant you have nothing to do." --Unknown Marine Recruit
65. "If you see a bomb technician running, try to keep up with him." --USAF Ammo Troop
The following contains, for the most part, nothing of any real significance. Just so y'all know, the purpose of this blog is not to post amusing nothings such as this post. Generally (not always), I will try to write articles of substance. However, even The Preacher (at least, the fella we believe to have been The Preacher) extols the value of a good laugh . . . so fear not that my humble journal will be entirely devoid of humor. Those of you who know me fairly well can attest to this, I am certain.
There are dozens of these sets of "ROEs" out there - this is my personal collection. Hope you fellows enjoy them.
Murphy’s Rules of Combat
(a.k.a. Combat For Dummies)
1. “If the enemy is in range, so are you.” --Infantry Journal
2. Incoming fire has the right of way.
3. Don't look conspicuous: it draws fire (see 11., below).
4. The easy way is always mined.
5. “Try to look unimportant; the enemy may be low on ammo” --Infantry Journal
6. Professionals are predictable - it's the amateurs that are dangerous.
7. The enemy invariably attacks on one of two occasions:
a. When you're ready for them.
b. When you're not ready for them.
Or
a. when they're ready
b. when you're not.
8. Teamwork is essential - it gives the enemy someone else to shoot at.
9. If you can't remember, the claymore is pointed toward from you.
10. If your attack appears to be going really well for once, it’s an ambush.
11. "Don't draw fire; it irritates the people around you." --Infantry Journal
12. The only thing more accurate than incoming enemy fire is incoming friendly fire.
13. “When the pin is pulled, Mr. Grenade is not our friend.” --U.S. Marine Corps
14. If it's stupid but works, it ain’t stupid.
15. When in doubt, empty the magazine.
16. Never share a fox hole with anyone braver than yourself.
17. Anything you do can get you shot. Including, doing nothing.
18. Make it too tough for the enemy to get in, and you can't get out.
19. Mines are equal opportunity weapons.
20. A Purple Heart just proves that were you smart enough to think of a plan, dumb enough to try it, and lucky enough to survive.
21. Don't ever be the first, don't ever be the last and NEVER, EVER volunteer to do anything.
22. The quartermaster has only two sizes: too large and too small.
23. “Five second fuses [are guaranteed to] last three seconds.” --Infantry Journal
24. You are not Superman (Marines and fighter pilots take note).
25. A sucking chest wound is Nature's way of telling you to slow down.
26. If at first you don't succeed, call in an airstrike.
27. If you are forward of your position, your artillery will fall short.
28. Never forget that your weapon was made by the lowest bidder.
29. The enemy diversion you're ignoring is their main attack.
30. No OPLAN ever survives initial contact.
31. There is no such thing as a perfect plan.
32. There is no such thing as an atheist in a foxhole.
33. A retreating enemy is probably just falling back and regrouping
34. Friendly fire - ain’t.
35. Recoilless rifles - aren't.
36. Suppressive fires - won't.
37. Protective fire - don't.
38. Perfect plans - aren't.
39. The important things are always simple.
40. The simple things are always hard.
41. If you're short of everything except the enemy, you're in combat.
42. No combat-ready unit has ever passed inspection.
43. No inspection-ready unit has ever passed combat.
44. Radios will fail as soon as you need fire support.
45. When both sides are convinced that they are about to lose ... they are both right.
46. All weather close support doesn't work in bad weather.
47. The bursting radius of a grenade is always one foot greater than your jumping range.
48. The only terrain that is truly controlled is the terrain upon which you are standing.
49. The law of the bayonet says the man with the bullet wins.
50. The best tank killer is another tank. Therefore tanks are always fighting each other ...& have no time to help the infantry.
51. Precision bombing is normally accurate to within +/- one mile (...or so).
52. “Cluster bombing from B-52s is very, very accurate. The bombs are guaranteed to always hit the ground.” --USAF Ammo Troop
53. The side with the fanciest uniforms loses.
54. Armored vehicles are bullet magnets; a moving foxhole that attracts attention.
55. No plan survives the first few seconds of combat.
56. Expending material in combat is easier than filling out Graves Registration forms -- Ammo is cheap; your life isn't.
57. Just because you can't see the enemy; don't for a minute believe they can't see you.
58. When you have secured an area, don't forget to tell the enemy.
59. "Aim towards the enemy." --Instruction printed on U.S. Rocket Launcher
60. "A slipping gear could let your M-203 grenade launcher fire when you least expect it. That would make you quite unpopular in what's left of your unit." --Army's magazine of prevention maintenance
61. "It is generally inadvisable to eject directly over the area you just bombed." --U.S. Air Force manual
62. "Tracers work both ways." --U.S. Army Ordnance
63. "Any ship can be a minesweeper....once." --Anon
64. "Never tell the platoon sergeant you have nothing to do." --Unknown Marine Recruit
65. "If you see a bomb technician running, try to keep up with him." --USAF Ammo Troop
Sunday, October 14, 2007
'Evening, Y'all
Well. I've got a blog.
Kind of exciting.
At some point, I will sit down and outline my purpose for this weblog journal, and the general ideas that will be conveyed within. For now . . . I'll content myself with this brief introduction, and move on to bigger and better stuff.
Until later,
Johnson
Kind of exciting.
At some point, I will sit down and outline my purpose for this weblog journal, and the general ideas that will be conveyed within. For now . . . I'll content myself with this brief introduction, and move on to bigger and better stuff.
Until later,
Johnson
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