The Watershed


          Our ancestors, historians, and those of us who happen to still be alive, will refer to this moment—the year 2020—with an as-yet-to-be-coined term, the meaning of which will be similar to: the watershed.

          The bubonic plague years in the 1300s were not called the Black Death until centuries later.  It was the middle-ages.  Religions were governments; they blamed any faction of "outside group" who they deemed deserving of death (the only thing they didn't do was blame the fleas or their deity).

          The world war of over a century ago, was not called either the Great War nor the First World War until decades later (for obvious reasons) but it was referred to as the war to end war in its time, allegedly as a call-to-arms and a reason to be proud to fight the Germans (after the Second World War, it may have retained the label 'the war to end all wars' in a sarcastic manner).

          The 1918 influenza pandemic, which—coincidentally—overlapped the first world war years, was mis-labelled the Spanish Flu because Spain was neutral during the first world war and, therefore, had no reason to prevent their press from reporting its serious death toll.

          Today's Corona virus (covid19) happened to overlap an authoritarian US political administration led by a sociopath, almost solely focused on enriching corporations and wealthy individuals.  Because sociopath's do not think about anyone but themselves, almost every governmental act appears to be the opposite of what would protect lives and serve the most vulnerable portions of the populace.

          A few months ago, a large percentage of the world's population was correctly directed not to go outside, nor to work, nor to school—so as to slow the rate of infection of the virus, which would allow the health care systems of the world to keep up with the expected increase in the rate of infection.  Many disregarded this guidance; especially the ignorant sociopaths who supported and continue to support the current federal administration's policies.  Today, many health care systems are so over-burdened they are forced to choose who is too sick to receive their dwindling supplies.  Death panels are a thing in the US today (so far, the press is too kind to label it that).

          Two months ago, also coincidentally, another sociopath employed as a Minneapolis Police Officer, murdered a black man on camera.   

          I wonder.  Are we all too deep in the weeds to step back and see the forest from the trees (I like mixing my metaphors)?  I think we're actually standing on the top of the watershed, looking over the top of that weedy-forest. 

          Behind us are all the past horrible US political administrations which scorned its citizens; all the previous times a police officer murdered a black man; all the past memories of people who died during a plague when their governments blamed others; every historical government which bailed out a bunch of corporations and let their average citizens go bankrupt.

          Ahead of us are . . . all up to you . . . (my crystal ball is for ornamentation purposes only).

          Tens of millions of your neighbors are on unemployment and can't pay their rent / mortgage.

          The government would rather point its finger at the protestors and demonstrators (who just want their governments to change their law enforcement officer's behavior and stop murdering citizens).

          The administration has already provided hundreds of billions to corporations to keep the stock market from crashing; today it seems poised to allow banks / landlords to evict, and wants to drastically reduce you and your neighbors ability to collect enough unemployment to feed your/themselves.

          Hurricane season has begun.  Did wildfire season ever leave?  Floods will be back soon (and never left in many places).  Earthquakes and tsunamis could be just over the horizon.  Terrible events will overlap this terrible pandemic; we all must do everything in our power to support each other and work together for all of our futures.  Together.  I say it this way, because . . .

          Plagues of the past have always lasted years—not months—three to four years, on average.  That's either the entire Biden presidency or the entire second Trump term.  And you think things will be different in today's world?  Why? 

          A 2021 vaccine will (likely) only be able to provide the same protection that the normal flu vaccine provided/provides.  Look backwards to the past-side of this watershed moment, in your rear-view mirror; did you routinely get your flu vaccine?  Every year?  Did everyone you know?  How many anti-vaccine people live in your community?  How many people you know already refuse to wear a mask today?  Do you actually think anything is going to change?

          Pessimism 101 teaches that, statistically, Trump will be re-elected.

          The sped-up approval process for the vaccine will not work very well, and be given out in a much too-little and much too-late manner; consequently, the world-wide death toll in a few short years will be difficult to pin-point (many countries like China have already drastically under-reported) but a softball estimate is 100 million; the US death toll will be (slightly) more accurate: at a little over twenty million.

          Because of massive homelessness, unemployment, systemic racism, a broken criminal justice system, unfettered militaristic police agencies, and very-poor recovery of several major sectors of industry and commerce the US will undergo a real constitutional crisis—some will call it a coup.

          But.  Optimism/realism 101 teaches that, intelligence prevails and Biden is elected.

          The vaccine works ok, but needs to be booster-shot every 90 days.  The new administration passes a law:  every employer, school, hospital, and restaurant/store, is required to check every employee, student, patient, and customer's up-to-date shot record before they can be paid, get a report card, check-in, or buy anything.  World deaths top 6 million; US deaths reach slightly more than 1 million.

          The US congress and senate, with Biden's administration, begin to make changes in the legal system (Police unions are banned nation-wide).  Many laws are thrown out; things which were once illegal are now legal.  Police who murder are sent to prison; smaller, better-trained police departments actually protect all classes and races of their citizenry and are required to adhere to a new service oath (two-time violators of this oath are terminated).  A series of massive WPA-level retraining- and work-programs boost the economy.  The world begins (by 2023) to limp back to its feet.

This is a work in Philosopical progress
       and these are the '
interesting times' RFK referred to in 1966. . .


          Always.  Constantly.  Your entire life.  Yesterday, today and especially tomorrow; you were, are, and will be talked about . . . after you walk out the door.  Also, before you arrive.  And, when you are not present.  Does this come as a surprise?  Maybe this is something you prefer not to think about?  If so, you might be someone who chooses to think that only you talk about other people candidly, without fetter, when they're out of earshot.

           You were raised by hypocrites, who were themselves reared by hypocrites.  Generations of people who thrived on gossip but shamed those who talked about them "behind their backs."  They, who filled long hours talking about those around them—but, invariably, denied (and will deny tomorrow) talking about you.  The result is a classic dichotomy:  you and your family hold two conflicting ideas in your head at the same time; you talk about everyone you know, but you don't think they talk about you the same way.  They do.  Especially if you attempt to manipulate how they should think about you when you talk to them.  To them.  Not with them.  That shit gets you judged faster than any other behavior.  Fake.  Insincere.  Shallow.  Vapid.  (Are never said to your face.)

          Decades ago, social researchers posited that the majority of adults had between five and twenty-five other adults who were members of their circle of trust.  That was before the internet; when people paid large amounts of money (relative to their income) for "long distance phone calls," and—almost exclusively—communicated by talking face-to-face and writing letters delivered by affixing inexpensive postage stamps to envelopes.  Those hippy researchers labeled our 'inner circles' as circles of intimacy (containing between zero and five people) and the third ring as our circles of associates with a maximum of 150 acquaintances and friends-of-friends.

          During these Trying Times of The Twenties (TToTT®) although technology makes instant communication simple, our circles of trust have shrunk.  [I wanted to edit out these cute correlation-causations, but I like them too much:  the number of characters in your average text; the number of colors and filters in your latest insta; the number of likes; number of favs; of πŸ–’; of conversations (pay-to-talk helps, but doesn't count); of pills you take; of videos you watch; of ... ?] ... Do you even know how to have a conversation?  A real one?

          Today's hipster researchers have re-researched and, now, our circles of trust contain between zero and five people and our circle of intimacy now contains—on average—between zero and two people.  This deserves repeating:  your circles of intimacy and trust may be nonexistent.  Are there any people with whom you can relax and tell anything to ... ... who feel likewise about you?  Are you certain of that?

          Now, of course, you have viewers, followers, and 'facebook friends'.  Those screen-names might fit into our circles of associates, but more-than-likely they are a fourth circle:  strangers hoping you Egostroke, Entertain, or Educate for Free (EEE 4 Free®).

fuck you and the horse you rode in on IRONY HURTS

          O. K.  (you say)  So . . . this is a blog post about Philosophy.  Capital P.  This is the point where you philosophize, bitch.  Impart your art!  Tell me (you demand) about some long-dead, heavily-read, thinker.  Someone who lived during the time of leeches; thrived under the threat of being spiked to a crossbeam until they asphyxiated; for whom pedophilia was routine and customary (their entire lives: catcher-to-pitcher); who practiced a rape-is-legal level of misogyny; who proudly owned slaves (but wrote thoughtfully on how to get the most out of one's chattel-born); and who only thought murder was immoral when it was done to men of his wealth, class, race, and education . . . what knowledge did he have to impart regarding how to cope with my life's difficulties (you ask).  Share the wisdom (you cajole) which might help me assuage these new hardships as I have difficulty coping with uncomfortable and unfamiliar mask-breathing and social-distancing as a modern socially distant person living without access to all the comforts and privileges I was accustomed to a couple of months ago (you say without awareness of the irony, except that I've rubbed your nose in it for a paragraph).

          Stay alert for opportunities to be able to say the sentences: "I was wrong"; "I don't know"; or "That is a new (word, idea, concept, etc) for me".   

          And, when the opportunity occurs, say those words to your viewers, screen-names, followers, and 'friends'.  Then, keep talking to them.  Ask them to explain their point of view, request they share their opinion, and maybe you could even apologize for being wrong. *shudder*  Honest.  Sincere.  Thoughtful.  Challenging.  (Said in your presence ellipsis question-mark.)  

          This mind-set is transformative.  If you are someone who never says these sentences, who never admits to any of these attributes of normal human behavior (or incessantly qualifies the rare admissions you're capable or willing to make) don't give up, you're more than half way there!  It takes more effort to frown than to smile . . . which is just a metaphor I borrowed to point out the huge wall your ego must be constantly building around you.  Justifying the biases which we all have (but which you are seemingly unaware)🞹🞹.

          It is only an inordinate strength of intellect which recognizes it is never the strongest nor the most intelligent, can easily admit if-and-when it has misspoken, and eagerly listens with the intent to learn; which always possesses a child's openness to absorb new information (with the seasoned reasoning of a philosopher only acting as custodial-staff: stepping-in to clean up afterwards); and actively hopes-for and wants—when listening/reading—to hear anything which might improve its out-of-date, biased, confused brain with new-to-you knowledge.  Something, which another might have been carrying around in their head (and been willing to impart) for as long as you've known them.  For free.  All you had to do was ask. *gasp* 

          Normally, I'd attribute, here, which terrible human being(s) I gleaned the above advice from.  The thing is, it came from all of them and none of them.  It's not even possible to source to a single style, type, or area of philo-theosophical writing.

          A bunch of eastern and western dudes (who probably supported the burning of witches for speaking heresy—if, in no other way, than by keeping silent when their next-door neighbors did it) wrote a bunch of random ideas in letters, books, diaries, and formal speeches.  Probably a large amount of which they'd heard or read in books or libraries which were later sacked and burned, so—today—they appear to be the first to think these thoughts.  Which, let me assure you, they were not; almost everything is paraphrased.

          For years, I've put some of that shite which has been attributed to them in my head.  Then, I typed this distillation.  If this makes me a philosopher, please, know this:  I reject almost everything ever written or said, by almost anyone I've ever listened to, or read.  If pressed, I'll probably disagree with the majority of what I just wrote.  *sigh*

🞹🞹  as to what is meant by half-way there and seemingly:  Those who are already vigilantly hyper-attentive, in order to never admit their fallibility, are unaware this always makes them appear to be trying to be someone they're not, which is all it takes to be considered untrustworthy.  Which is why their circles of intimacy and trust are small (or gone) and why they are spoken about, negatively, behind their back.  The fix sounds simple:  admit misspeaking, admit not knowing, admit learning something new.  



more on 'how to relate' (to your-2020-self and others):


          Senator Robert F. "Bobby" Kennedy's full Day of Affirmation speech is linked here; I especially enjoy the following excerpts: ...The cruelties and the obstacles of this swiftly changing planet will not yield to obsolete dogmas and outworn slogans.  ...  "There is," said an Italian philosopher, "nothing more difficult to take in hand, more perilous to conduct, or more uncertain in its success, than to take the lead in the introduction of a new order of things."  ...  Each time a man stands up for an ideal, or acts to improve the lot of others, or strikes out against injustice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each other from a million different centers of energy and daring: those ripples build a current which can sweep down the mightiest walls of oppression and resistance. ...  There is a Chinese curse which says "May he live in interesting times." Like it or not, we live in interesting times. They are times of danger and uncertainty; but they are also the most creative of any time in the history of mankind. And everyone here will ultimately be judged - will ultimately judge himself – on the effort he has contributed to building a new world society and the extent to which his ideals and goals have shaped that effort. ...
          That RFK was unwilling to attribute the new-order-of-things quote to Machiavelli, by name, gives me a tickle.  It was ballsy enough to give this speech in mid-apartheid South Africa, but to reference the guy who wrote the book on how to unseat a government by any and all means?  Priceless.        

image portions for fuck you and the horse you rode in on IRONY HURTS by:

KISSES


(click for πŸ”Ž)

           This conglomeration of nine real image portions (one which was quasi-distorted) is intended to instigate a type of ambedo.  One's eye is drawn to the center, into a storefront, to a poster on the wall above teller windows—what kind of business would KISSES be and who would be so comfortable, in today's society, to challenge their customers with such a necessary (albeit polarizing) question?  The pleasantly warm bustle of a city and the genuine happiness of a mother—yet what city has simple-to-climb rungs on sidewalk electric poles?  Multiple mirrors provide you, the driver, with ample all-around views—but what is happening around your bus?  And, what thought(s) or emotion(s) was the artist trying to instigate in viewers . . . of the sticker they adhered to the electric pole?   

Composite collage art comprised of photos by:

Saint Labrador the Retriever (et al)




          In Waterbury, Vermont, you can:  touristy-tour the Ben and Jerry's ice cream factory and the Cold Hollow Cider Mill; view sculpture-art on the train-trestle and Saint Labrador the Retriever; hike, bike, or cross-country ski the portion of the Cross-Vermont Trail which loops around the old state hospital and asylum grounds and parallels the Winooski River; or you can meander the obstacle course of the three-year (2019-2021) construction project to explore the tiny downtown area where there is one art gallery, a thrift shop, a bookstore, two bric-a-brac stores, a nice toy store, and a hand-full of bars with a double hand-full of restaurants/diners.




other Vermont to-see's:


Essential Apostrophe


          Whacha been doing since we last talked?

          A decision tree bloomed in my head.

          I considered, for approximately .07 of a second, replying with a brief explanation of the various philosophy books, video-synopses, websites, and—subsequently formed—logical insights I'd come up with on aesthetics, fallacies and personal politics... and how all that related to the ongoing pandemic from my point-of-cloister; which caused me to focus/trip over how pretentious that-all might sound if it were dumped into my unprepared ear-brain.

          So I shifted to considering (for an additional .14  of a second) a nutshell-sketch of my recent art collages:  how I'd created them after perusing thousands of images—over scores of hours—for just the right fit to tell just the right story, to engage my viewers for an extended moment of their lives and (hopefully) cause them to think about what that specific image is asking them to feel, which is the same as what I, the composer, am hoping to communicate.  Which, unfortunately, caused me to realize;  a conversation of this magnitude would require visuals, and a friendly talk was not the place for a PowerPoint presentation.

          For the next full second I thought about the things I'd done since we'd last talked:  I'd gone to a drive-in theater with four screens to choose from (two films at each) and each screen had it's own audio over a different FM radio station.  But.  It was just a drive-in.  It was just Empire Strikes Back...  Also, I'd:  hiked with my cats a few times, gone picnicking, had a campfire, gone to a museum filled with hundreds of hand carved birds, and explored parts of the Green Mountains as well as the islands in Lake Champlain with my wife.  But those were just special things to us.  It was just sightseeing.

          Same-old same-old.  Tryin' not to catch it again.  Or spread it if I'm still contagious.  Keepin' busy.  You?

          Not much different.  Can't wait for this to be over so I can go back to work.  Back to normal.

          I wondered about asking: what if that's never possible - if wearing masks and staying separate was forever - if the education paradigm was going to become 90% online/virtual and the 10% hands-on requirements were going to be held in sterile environments with 14-day quarantines whenever someone entered - if full-body spacesuits were going to be a thing - if . . . nah . . . too pessimistic. 

          I thought you were an essential worker.

          Who're es..essential workers.

          The preferred term's sex worker; I'm pretty sure they aren't.

          Hunh?  Now I'm confused.

          Asked if you were essential and it sounded like you said whores are essential.

          Oh.  The apostrophe in who-are is essential.  I'm not.


comprised of photos titled apostrophe by:

use yer werds ews-yur-wurdz
     aka: floating heads and already deads




          US Federal personnel wearing military uniforms without insignia (except a POLICE patch), driving unmarked rental vans, have begun arresting/detaining people in Portland, Oregon.  In one video, the protester-camerawoman repeats the phrase: use your words towards the mute authoritarian federal law enforcement officers who are in the act of snatching-and-disappearing an alleged protester.  


 collage-art in the same vein:

The Luck Dragon





Swansong cloudy ride - must you always land?
prolong! vow thee bide, thrust to take a stand.
right/wrong soundly snide trussed beforehand.
ding-dong ciao deride; just th' rue as planned.

Falkor might come back.  He's not forever lost.
give yer kite sum slack, 'tis but weather tossd.
lots more shite-n-frack, xpect untethered cost.
old lore, setback - read mending wall by Frost.




obviously animals got harmed (during the creative process)




This composition was created by searching down the
flikr favorite rabbit-hole:
my discovery of a subjectively relevant image in
a photographer's 'faves' leads to searching that
photographer's faves for another image,
which resulted in - all of the above.




image excerpts by:  Reinhold S, Pavel P, Don Springer, Austin Granger,

eye am knot





you give Me A wood
ICH BiN NiCHT (I'm Not)
This is not a good place.
Cops Set the fire



more pareidolia related art:


image excerpts by Austin Granger and Paul McFarland

Covid Diary - Chapter 2


          About ten weeks ago, I wrote about my wife and I catching what we could only assume was Covid19.  I updated that article for a month, until our symptoms disappeared.

          In the two month interim, I have experienced three slight recurrences of the symptoms and she has experienced one.  Each were/are identical to our first symptoms only milder in both intensity and duration.

          I added 'are' to the last sentence because I—as I type (7 July 2020)—am, again, symptomatic.

          It began yesterday with sore long muscles in my arms; as if I had done too many push-ups the day before.  As the day progressed, I tested my muscles.  Other muscles began to feel unaccountably fatigued after very little activity.  Newly notable, was, when I entered strong sunlight, my iris's failed to contract as if an optometrist had dilated my eyes.  Today, every muscle is just slightly sore, which I notice most in my fingers, neck, abdomen, and thighs.  Slight headache.  No other symptoms.

          For the last three months we both have practiced social distance and/or stayed home; we wear masks and gloves if going shopping (which is the only time I went out recently: grocery shopping four days ago).

          Obviously, antibodies are only effective for a short period of time and then the antibodies, which may be still present, helped to reduce the severity of our symptoms from massive, can't-get-out-of-bed whole-body, 48-hour exhaustion (Chapter 1, for us) to a few hours of slightly tired muscles.

          This is my opportunity to pass along some funny-albeit-apropos words I heard from my daughter yesterday:  after all the shit I've done in my life, if I die because I touched my face...

Orangemen's Mailbox


Orangemen's Mailbox - 12 July (Orangemen's Day / 'The Glorious Twelfth')




Mailbox artwork - ALL
Santa Claus' Mailbox - 25 Dec (Christmas)
AULDLANGSYNE's Mailbox - 1 Jan (New Year's Day)
Sommerzeit's Mailbox - 8 Mar (Daylight Savings Time 2020 / 'Summertime' in Germany)
Γ”STARA's Mailbox - 19 Mar (Vernal Equinox / first day of Spring - northern hemisphere 2020)
Avril Poisson's Mailbox - 1 Apr (April Fools Day / April Fish in France)
St. George's Mailbox - 23 Apr (Feast of St George)
May IV's Mailbox - 4 May (Star Wars Day)
Serling's Mailbox - 11 May (Twilight Zone Day)


image portion by Jamie Wheeler

Laundromat Pantograph




For those interested in a game of Seek and Find:
I compiled this collage from the photographs of
Oregon artist Austin Granger (flikr link below).
- Good luck determining exactly how many -


continue viewing composite artworks:

image excerpts by Austin Granger at austingranger.com

BFR in the ROK
       (Big Fuckin Rock in the Republic of Korea)

           As I entered the platoon office, Staff Sergeant Colwell gestured with his chin in the direction of a soldier standing in front of his desk at parade rest.  Without looking up from the documents on his blotter, SSG Colwell squinted the left portion of his permanent wrinkles in my direction—which was either a smile, sneer, frown or grimace—and said in his quiet rumble (indicating it wasn't a sneer or frown) “Sergeant, this is Private Wiznewski.”

           I turned and extended my hand.  Wiznewski didn’t even move his eyes, let alone his hand.  I smiled and said, “At ease Wiznewski.  Pleased to meet you.”  He slowly brought his eyes to meet mine, almost smiled and returned the handshake like this was his first-ever.  I glanced down at his terrible handshake and murmured, “We’re gonna work on that.”

           Before I could say anything more, SSG Colwell interrupted.  “Private.  This is Sergeant Glines.  The squad leader for second squad.  He’s your squad leader.  Which means you are in the second squad.  Got it?”   I wondered about what had been said to make SSG Colwell think it was necessary to hammer the numbers and titles.

          “Yes. . .second squad, Platoon Sergeant; pleased to meet you, Sergeant.”  Wiznewski replied to both of us; his voice was average—matching his build, height and hair color and contrasting with his apparent age (he looked about fourteen years old).

          SSG Colwell then gave us both some brisk parting words containing a full complement of threats and ultimatums.  No matter that Wiznewski graduated from Military Police school last week, arrived in Korea yesterday, only assigned to us this afternoon, and had not been issued any equipment yet—he was to be ready to go to the field for training with the rest of our platoon in four days.

          As my squad—the second squad, of the second platoon, of the 142d MP Company—departed the platoon’s tactical operations area the first morning of the field training exercise, we traveled in a convoy of three HUMMWVs.  My driver was PFC LaMott; in my opinion she was the best driver in the company.  And, with newly-issued equipment and (now) fully trained on how to correctly shake hands, PVT Wiznewski rode in the turret as my M60 gunner.

          Behind us, my other two HUMMWVs contained three occupants each: SGT Tinley was my second team leader and SGT Lee, a KATUSA, was my third team leader.   CPL Yoon, also a KATUSA, was SGT Tinley’s driver and PFC Witherspoon was the gunner for vehicle two.  PV2 Smith drove vehicle three (he hated being called Smith or Smitty and somehow ended up with Robert as a nickname, even though his name was Darryl—I think it was because of Robert Smith of The Cure—it was 1989, but it still makes very little sense.)  I don’t remember the name of vehicle three’s gunner, we called him Joe; he was either from California or talked about living there.

          We parked the vehicles near a roadside market, purchased snacks (which in the late-80s usually meant 16oz returnable bottles of Pepsi and Choco-Pie brand moon pies) and then I explained to my eight squad members how the week of training was supposed to go and how it was actually going to go:

          “Every day, all week, we’re supposed to drive our entire assigned area in a tactical three-vehicle convoy.  Our platoon is conducting battlefield route recon.  Our squad has the area marked on these maps.  The other two squads have different areas, different maps.  We’re tasked with comparing maps with actual terrain and making corrections on the maps as we discover them.  For example, if a bridge is marked on the map as having an 18 ton weight limit, but a sign on the bridge says 8 tons, we’d make a note.  We have many hundreds of miles of crisscrossing roads to cover.

          “The way we are actually going to accomplish this—much faster and more efficiently—is to separate.  Each team will drive an area, or a section, and make notes.  Before returning to the campsite in the evening before dinner, we’ll meet and I’ll update the main map with your notes.  That way it’ll all be in my writing.

          “I don’t know how much you all heard this morning when he was talking, but SSG Colwell has directed us to never change our radios off of the platoon frequency and also he said we aren’t allowed to stop and buy any snacks or local food.”  I said this as I raised a Pepsi bottle over my head, which got chuckles and laughter.

          “He thinks he can monitor us if he can always hear us, which would prevent us from separating.  But we will do it this way:  I’ll give you each a section.  We separate.  Drive different routes.  When we need to talk to each other without him hearing, say something on the platoon frequency about an animal, then immediately switch your channel over to 696969.00, say what needs to be said—like meet for lunch at the market at blah-blah grid coordinates—then switch back quickly to the platoon frequency.  Questions?”

          And that is how it went for three days.  Smooth.  Almost all our recons were already complete and we still had four more days left.

          On the fifth day, as we were departing the platoon camp, my vehicle’s engine got an electrical short.  Melting plastic, smoke, flames and several fire extinguishers later—we were down to two vehicles.  No one was at fault.  No matter, SSG Colwell wanted to find someone to blame and hated that he couldn’t twist this into someone doing something he had forbidden.  Because of this, his threats become more venomous.

          My two vehicles were now full with four people in each.  I said to PVT Wisnewski, “Hey, sorry man, you’re still a member of the second squad.   It’s just that I need you to ride with first squad for the rest of the week.  Not as an M60 gunner, just as an extra team member.  Shit happens.”

          And that was how it went for two more days.  Still smooth.  Our recons were now 99% complete, so we mostly fucked off and swam in a creek and relaxed in the shade.

          On the last day we had only two roads to finish (which was expected to take no more than an hour) and then everyone was ordered to meet with SSG Colwell and the Lieutenant at a central area before 1700 hrs.  Late?  Expect to be punished. 

          We finished the road recons, took lunch—Pepsi and Moonpies, and then leisurely headed south along the most direct road which the map showed connected to a highway leading to the meeting area.  About noon we exited the area we were responsible for updating.  An hour later, the road ended at the edge of a rice paddy.  The highway, which we wanted to be on, was about 200 meters away. . .on the other side of the mud-filled paddy.  A dirt track, which appeared to be just wide enough for a HMMWV, had replaced what the map showed was a two-lane gravel road.

          “Sergeant, this is exactly what we are out here to find!  To correct on the map, right?”

          “Yes LaMott.  And I’ll make sure it's noted on the map first squad was responsible for, but, more important at the moment is deciding if we can slowly creep across this dirt berm or if we turn around and make the full loop back to where the road connects to the highway.”

          “If you ground-guide me across, I can make it.  No problem.  Driving that loop will add an extra two hours of bumpy gravel roads.  We’ll be fine crossing the dirt-berm if we go slow.  These are hummvees!”

          I began to walk backwards (signalling with my hands if tires got too close to the edge) and she slowly, carefully, drove forward.  The second vehicle crept behind us with SGT Tinley ground-guiding it.

          Half way across, the front tire on the passenger side slipped off the dirt edge of the berm (my fault for not ground-guiding further away from that edge).  Four-wheel drive began to churn loose dirt, but there was an obstruction catching the bottom edge of the front bumper.  It was preventing the truck from climbing back up onto the top of the berm.  We couldn’t reverse back up onto the berm because the loose dirt on the edge began to erode, which was causing the angle of the HMMWV to increase—too much more and it looked like the truck might roll down onto its side in the deep rice paddy mud.

          “I’m looking at what seems to be stopping us from making it back onto the berm, Sergeant.  It just looks like a tiny sharp rock.”  Said SGT Tinley from under the front bumper.

          “OK, get a shovel, pickaxe, and the muscles of Joe and Witherspoon up here to clear it.”  I replied.

          I began to calculate.  There were plenty of hours.  We could do this.

          Thirty minutes later the hole around the “tiny rock” was now almost a five foot circle and at least eighteen inches deep at the outside edge.  We had all spent time with shovels and various tools of destruction to no avail.  The four inches of rock jutting out of the edge of the berm was connected to a massive bolder which sloped away in all directions like a wedding cake.  When LaMott drove forward, the front bumper came to rest against the top few inches of the bolder.

          Another thirty minutes and I watched as Robert, shirtless, stood over the rock and bludgeoned it with a ten-pound sledge hammer, sending shards of granite splintering with every blow.  Tinley and I stood back as Robert shouted, “Fuck me to hell, Sergeant, this damn thing goes all the way to the core of the Earth!”

          “Ok.  Stop.  STOP.  Take a break Robert.  LaMotte, begin unwinding our winch.  I want to see if it will reach that metal telephone pole at the edge of the highway.”  As she began to un-spool the cable, I got on the radio.

          “This is DeltaTwoLima, warning anyone driving along highway eighteen-alpha near grid coordinate SC189543, there is a cow loose in the road.  Warning: cow in the roadway.  Drive with caution in that area.”

          I switched to 696969.00 and waited.  Two minutes.  Three minutes.  Come on.  Come on.  Come on.

          “Hello Veach? This is Dan.”  (SGT Dan Primock, the first squad leader.)

          “Fuuck it’s great to hear your voice, Dan.  I was worried Wisnewski wouldn’t remember.  I owe him one and I will owe you double if you can help us out of a jam.”

          “What’s with this secret squirrel shit?”  He asked in a laughing tone.

          “Got stuck at SC432476 and need a vehicle with a winch at the edge of the highway where that secondary road meets it.  Can you do that without talking on the platoon freq?”

          “Umm, let me look.”  His pause lasted forever.  “Yeah, we’re only 30 minutes south.  See ya soon.”

          LaMotte came back and pointed out that the cable was short by about ten meters, which was what I’d assumed.  I told them to continue to dig around the boulder, pry with the pick-axe, and attempt to break chunks off with the sledge while we waited for the first squad to arrive.  I said, dejectedly, “Hopefully, guys, you can find the edge of it.  If not, I’m counting on Plan B: connecting two winch cables together and them dragging us over that motherfucker without damaging the undercarriage.  Colwell is going to broil my ass over his personal hell-fire.  He’s someone who’d fuckin love to ruin my career—I want to do everything I can to avoid making him that happy.”

          First squad showed up and began to spool out their cable, connect them, and winch them tight.  Now, the hole around the boulder was deeper—about two feet at the deepest—and, accordingly, the bumper came to rest about five inches below the top of the rock.  Try as we could (and did) there was no way to winch/drive it up and over that BFR.

          “Ok, guys.  I was afraid of this.  Start winding up your winch, Dan.  Everyone else!  Climb inside first platoon’s vehicles.  You’re going to have to sit on laps and climb into the bed with the gear.  I’ll stay here with the two vehicles.  You’ll all make it to the 1700 meeting.  That way, I’m the only person who gets in trouble. . .aaannd. . .What.  In.  The.  Hell.  Could.  This.  Guy.  Want?”

          As I was talking and soldiers were re-winding winch cables and putting on shirts and beginning to store tools, a very, very, old and extremely well dressed—in traditional white suit, hat, and booties—Korean gentleman slowly shuffled toward us along the berm, leading a large beige cow on a hand-braided rope.  The cow had a wooden ring the size of a dinner plate thru its nose.  The man was so stooped over that he seemed to only be able to look at the ground in front of him.  He stopped.  I said, “SGT Lee?  CPL Yoon?  Please tell this farmer that I, we all, are so very sorry for damaging the berm of his rice paddy.  And ask him what we can do to make up for it.”

          While the two KATUSA’s talked in hushed and respectful tones with the great-grandfather, I went to some of the other soldiers and asked them to examine their wallets for Korean money, and to please kick-in what they could (I assumed he would want to be paid for the damage).  I promised to repay them all if they would give it to him.  As they all began to check their wallets, SGT Lee approached me with an odd almost-smile in his eyes but not near his mouth.

          “What did he say, Lee?”

          “Sergeant he...  He wants to help.  Help us with the rock.”  Lee was struggling with keeping a smile away from his voice.  I stared at Lee to see if he had snapped in the heat and, somehow, thought that now would be time to crack a joke.  It didn’t feel like a prank.

          “How would he...?”  I asked as I looked past Lee at Yoon, who was not having any difficulty with laughter because the gentleman was handing him the rope to the cow’s nose ring and beginning to untie the front of his white linen jacket.

          “Does he think that his bull is going to have more success than the truck winches?”  My voice now had a bit of a giggle in it.  Lee could hear my breathy giggle and that caused the smile he was fighting off to reach his mouth.

          “I do not think he wants to use the cow, Sergeant.  He only asked if... he... could... use the sledgehammer.”  The word broke out of his mouth with many more chuckles than he wanted.  He tried to stuff them back in.

          But I had no similar compunction.  I laughed and said, loudly, “The fuck are you telling me?  Lee! Is this a joke?  This old guy, dressed in his Sunday best, can’t even stand up straight.  You just watched four strong soldiers fail to break that fucking hunk of Korea with a sledgehammer and a pick-axe for over an hour—are you, seriously, telling me that this dainty ninety-year-old wants a go?”

          “Yes.  He said he can help.”  Everyone, from both squads, were now standing and chuckling and smiling.  I looked at my watch.  It was 1530 and the drive—for them—would not be more than 30 minutes.

          “Ok.”  I shook my head with laughter and shrugged my shoulders, “Joe, hand him the sledgehammer.”

          The man said something.  Lee translated, “He only needs the top part.  The metal.”

          Joe turned the sledge over, tamped the handle, the head slipped to the ground, then he picked it up and handed it to the farmer, who was now hat-less.  The cow seemed inpatient and pulled on the rope a little.  Yoon tugged back.

          The man slowly, gingerly, lowered his legs into the hole we’d dug around the rock and then picked up the head of the sledgehammer in both hands, leaned forward toward the point of the rock and then tapped the rock with the metal.  He licked his hand, rubbed the rock, and then . . . tap tap tick tap.  He bent closer.  Looked at it from a slightly different angle, tap tick tap.  As thirty seconds became a minute ..tap, tap, tik.. and then a minute became five ..tap tap.. the spectacle wore off.  The funny died down.  Sure, there were still some giggles, but they were becoming snickers of embarrassment.  Someone said, with too much volume, “A diamond cutter!” ..tap, tic, tap.. “This farmer is going to find the vein in the granite!” ..tap, tick, sloooooog.

          The top tier of the rock-wedding cake, the size of a basketball, slid off and settled near the right foot of the diamond cutter.  Everyone burst into shouts and applause and shocked awe.

          I glanced at my watch—and began barking orders as I realized SSG Colwell may never get a chance to be happy on my account.  “Lee, get him out of that hole.  LaMotte, get behind the wheel.  Dan, Joe, Tilwell please pool all the Korean money you can find and give it to Yoon (I gave him about $20 worth)—Yoon, make a list of how much everyone gives and I want that list.  I’ll pay you all back.  Help him and his cow beyond the back vehicle and make sure he understands how much we— I —love what he was able to do.  I think we just witnessed a miracle!  Please explain to him why we need to go so quickly.  Thank you.  And thank him!”

          The HMMWV climbed over the topless-boulder like it wasn’t even there, made it down the berm to the highway in a few minutes, and we all drove to the meeting point.  We arrived before most.  SSG Colwell asked about the dirt and mud on the vehicle.  I said, “We had to veer around a cow in the middle of the road and went thru a mud puddle.  We called to warn others who might be driving in that area.”

          “Sounds like you were driving too fast for conditions.  I told you to insure everyone drove safely or I’d give you an article fifteen.  Sounds like you didn’t listen.”

          “We weren’t going fast.  Hardly moving at all.  But we didn’t hit the cow, just a little mud.”

          THIS STORY IS 100% FACTUALLY TRUE.  IT IS AS ACCURATE AS MY 30-YEAR OLD MEMORY CAN RECALL, BESIDES MOST OF THE NAMES (CHANGED TO PROTECT THE GUILTY) IT HAPPENED EXACTLY IN THIS MANNER AND IN THIS SEQUENCE.   I THINK IT'S THE BEST TRUE STORY FROM MY LIFE.