Monday, October 31, 2011

Fate, Folly & Fortuitousness



Those of you who know me know that when I travel, I sometimes see young children waiting to board my flight, a situation that moves me to feel not a small degree of apprehensiveness.  I see in their young faces (or imagine it) that they are the kind of children that cry in shrill tones when cooped up in a small tube-like cabin or when they are two small to realize that if they but clear their ears, the pain that is the source of their cries would simply go away.  As I prepare to board I wonder how close to my seat they will sit.  I sometimes think fatalistic thoughts that will be just behind me that their melodious cries of suffering and angst will travel straight from their mouths to my ears.  Well, no longer do I have to think it might happen.  I am in the second to final aisle in the plane and sitting down behind me… yep you guessed it, a sweet but increasingly restless child whose sweet little coos and sounds are slowly but increasingly picking up that piercing quality.  I’m not saying that kids don’t have the right to travel with their parents.  They absolutely do!  I don’t even like feeling this way and writing this blog is but a testament to this uneasy feeling and an attempt to come to terms with it.  Maybe I’m so shallow that I don’t like another human being invading my morning travel.  Maybe it reminds me of traveling with my children when they were small and my previously felt emotional concoction of pity for my boys as they struggled with the above symptoms and dealing with the expressions on peoples’ faces as they glanced back at me or Ronda.  So is it fate that these kids are behind me? 
But alas, as I pondered my own folly at feeling the way I do, a guy in the aisle seat across the aisle from me asks the flight attendant if there is an exit aisle seat open.  She responds that not only is there a seat open, there is one aisle completely empty, and another has only one seat of the three occupied.  I glance at him, then up at the flight attendant, not saying anything, but doing my best Oliver Twist expression that emanates, “Please, ma’am, is there another?”  She checks if the seats are still open, returns and takes him forward.  She then comes back, takes a knee next to me, looks me directly in the eyes, and asks, “Are you interested in one as well?”  Ah Yes, silent communicative forlorn expressions of want, you worked again!  “Yes, if there is still room” I reply.  “Do you have a carryon in the overhead back here?” she asks.  “Yes, slightly forward, but well behind the exit aisle” I respond.  “You will have to come back after the plane has emptied and retrieve it.  Is that okay?” she asks.  “Yes, I’m in no hurry” I respond.  If you know me, I like to grab my bag and exit the plane as quickly as possible, as though in a race with some unforeseen opponent trying to achieve some hollow victory.  Hmmm, so my patience will be tested after all as I watch people meander down the aisle that are unaware of the hurried race to deplane.   But we are pushing back from the gate now.  I am in the exit row pondering the fortuitous sequence of events that led to my sitting near a guy who had the initiative to pose the question to the flight attendant.  Though my test is a couple of hours away, at the end of the flight, I cannot hear the young child from this vantage point.  The extra legroom is definitely a plus as well!

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Off to work... with the less than 1%

JP5 fumes fill the air as we wait.  Rotor spinning above strobes the sunlight sneaking in through the window.  Crowded tight - no room for elbows or knees - like an ultra-low cost economy class flight in some forgotten land.  People resting, waiting for some unknown signal to lift off.  25 passengers crowded together but isolated from one another by double hearing protection.  The less than one percent.

The fumes now combine with sweat from a crowded cabin, sticking to the skin.  The vibrations increase in the frame of the bird and the body, rattling through the muscles and connective tissues as we taxi and lift; the mighty bird wrestling with the pull of gravity, each straining and pulling at the other like wrestlers in the heat of a fight.  The ground pulls further away, fading into the distance.  Fresh air sweeps through the cabin allowing the body to again take sufficient breathe and fill the lungs.  Off we go...

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

New Life

I feel incredibly blessed by the last year, for the amazing people I have met and for the hope of the future they carry in their hope, ambitions, intelligence, and amazing laughter.  As I return to my world of the military, I see in many of these folks the same hope, ambitions, intelligence and laughter.  I also recognize the pain of some who have experienced the terror and inhumanity of war.  I recognize it in their face as we sit awaiting our turn to receive gear, to have our photo taken.  I see their humanity strongly present, refusing to give in to the inhumanity they have witnessed. The struggle to keep it in check is more severe some days and not so on others.  These too are incredible men and women.
I feel as though I am a bridge.  In the same way that so many at Kroc had questions and misimpressions of the military, so the stream flows the other way, though not as strongly.  Another blessing, to live in both worlds; to value both worlds; and, if persistent, to be a part in building a bridge between both worlds.  The world in which we live needs this bridge.

Thursday, May 12, 2011

End of Year Thoughts


To all the peace peeps, it's been a great year
But please tell your story on the blogosphere
We won't see each other every day or two
So keep the blog current and tell us what you do
What you've been to me is a source of inspiration
Keep your drive and your passion to build a peace nation

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

First Post

The role of civil-military is of critical importance, especially in the US where so much of our interaction with others is conducted through the security lens, military being the principle mechanism of such engagement.  A lot of good can and does occur through such engagement around the world in the cause of peace and understanding.  There is always room for improvement.  As one who serves on active duty - it would be great to have some great exchange.  More to come!