Where
shall I begin? Shall we begin like David Copperfield? I am born? I grew up? I wont
be at all that organized. Let us instead begin in the middle. I joined the National Guard
as an Infantryman, or rather I joined the ROTC in college. I was so gung ho about being an
officer, and despite what people may think, ROTC at my university was the real deal. It
was like a fraternity with a mission, run by Army Rangers. It was a common phrase to say,
"School shit is getting in the way of Army shit again
" I volunteered for
everything
Colour guard, field trips, and functions involving the ROTC. There was a
program where you joined the National Guard while you where concurrently
enrolled in the ROTC called the SMP program. "What a fantastic opportunity" I
thought
"A real officer should know what it is like in the dirt before he leads
men." The officers and of course, the National Guard liaison thought it was a great
idea as well. I would like to tell you that it was all a logical decision. I would like to
tell you that things worked out for the best. But this is no fairytale land and things
could not have gone in a stranger direction. Enter Meche
A euphemism, ghost or
specter of my past
A woman. I was destroyed inside because I gave my heart to a
woman who cared nothing for me. Like all idiot men in love, I did not get it, and
destroyed my dignity trying to woo her. I will not say that it was all her fault and that
I hate her for being a cold unfeeling bitch
But that would be lying. I tried to hate
her, but it became clear in my eyes that the fault was more of my own, and my obsession
with her. After all, I am not a movie star, underwear model, or a Rock God. In fact I am
the opposite, and in comparison, a swamp when compared to a scenic coastal vista. She
wasnt a goddess either, but that is not why I fell in love with her.
I joined the Army in a last ditch effort of my mind, trying to kickstart my heart, to
clear my mind of Meche. Infantry Basic training was at the home of the Infantry
itself
In the place where basic training was still hard
A wilderness where the
PC politicians of Washington had little sway. I went to the hardest basic training post in
the country, to the hardest basic training battalion in the brigade, to the hardest basic
training company
The house of Pain, to the hardest basic training platoon
The
Warlords. Women where viewed as dilution of the standards
I remember when we
graduated basic training, our drill sergeant saying, "Now you have finished basic
training
That was all the shit all the other pussies and women do
Now its time
for Infantry shit!" Gay people did not exist there, and it was a commonly held
perspective among the more liberal drill sergeants to "
Put them all on an
island and let them butt fuck each other to death." Of which we found was enormously
funny. Your worth there was what you where capable of doing, and I respected that. In the
end I learned a great deal from basic, about myself. I have never been a physically, in
shape guy, and those little tasks seemed insurmountable to me. I learned all of those
things where based on how you perceived things. Once, on our 20-mile road march, I twisted
both my ankles while carrying the M60 machine gun
It wasnt about the pain
anymore though. It was about not giving up
and that is what I learned from basic
training. Its all a matter of perspective. On my graduation day, when I earned my
blue chord and discs which where what only the
infantry where allowed to wear
on their uniform, I felt 30 feet tall. One of my friends had the honour of going to the
house of pain, and he told me that they where cutting the standards down drastically on
the next cycle, and opening it to women as well
He said the drill sergeants where
now going to call it The house of pancakes (pronounced Pain cakes).
When I came back, the ROTC did not want me there. I didnt have the credit hours
in school enough to complete the program in 2 years
Although several cadets existed
that where in the same boat, yet still in the system. So I was on hold. They let me in the
next year, but they kicked me out on a paperwork error after I failed a diagnostic PT
test, but I was invited to try again. Fuck that
I got stuck with a 6-year guard
contract, with no GI bill, no sign up bonus
just my ass, and a small paycheck every
month.
My mechanized infantry company was a mixed bag. A combination of highly motivated
soldiers, to lazy NCOs that preferred to hide in the woods, get drunk, and show up
for final formation. Most of the excellent soldiers there where self-starters, and in
themselves a clique. After all, the rest of the unit was every National Guard stereotype
made true. The thing that surprised me about the clique that I hung around with had a
morbid fascination with WWII
Especially Nazi Germany,
and the
Schutzstaffel. Not the politics mind you, but the innovation of these organizations. They
pretty much invented mechanized warfare, and set the standard for a modern army
Mainly Blitzkrieg. They emulated the SS to a certain point, and it was common for us to
jokingly refer to some of the lieutenants as Ubersturmfuhrer or Obersturmfuhrer
The
German army equivalent. That is where it ended though
A good soldier was a good
soldier no matter what they looked like. So dont get yourself to believe that they
where a sort of KKK type organization, because that would be far from the truth. It caught
me off guard merely because anything vaguely connected to the Nazis is incredibly taboo.
Over time, most of these soldiers left the guard, changed units, or where promoted to
another unit
At the end of my rotation, very few of the original, exceptional
soldiers where left. It was mostly those lazy NCOs, getting drunk, barking orders,
and hiding when it was time to do any serious work. In the end, the command structure
dissolved completely, and we where left to mill around on the half understood orders of
Battalion commanders who where disconnected from their soldiers, and wanting to look good
to the politicians rather than improve their forced. Morale was destroyed, and when my
time came up, I jumped at the chance to leave. When I put on my uniform now, I felt like a
maggot
A parasite who fed off the taxpayers to stand around and wait for the
uninspired orders and mindless bravado of higher up. I was ashamed.

Musha
Shugyo