Monday, September 24, 2007

Nostos

Nostos (Greek: νόστος) (pl. nostoi) Homecoming. It is a theme dealt with in many Homeric writings such as the Odyssey, in which the main character, Odysseus, strives to get home after the Trojan War.

Fishing trawler a half mile up the coast. I just walked over the berm from the cabana, and the trawler is the first thing I spy. She's slowly crawling my way, and only several hundred meters from shore. Great booms reaching out over the water like the tentacles of an octopus. But it's the birds that really nab my attention. A cloud of shorebirds lazily floating, diving, and endlessly rotating around the old trawler. The atom doesn't exist without the electrons, and the electrons have no function if it weren't for the atom. It's like that.
The surf is washing over my feet. The sun is climbing with nary a cloud in the sky. And it dawns on me: I'm here. Shorts, bare feet, and a beer. This is me, I'm doing this, and it just won't process.

Forty eight hours ago I was going through customs at Ali Al Saleem in Kuwait. We get briefed on the x-rays, screening processes, and I get to hear the same old story about the Marine that tried to smuggle two grenades just yesterday in his sea-bag. This is by far the busiest Marine ever, because he's smuggled thousands of them by now. After carefully packing my gear, a customs officer and I dismantle the entire thing again as we look for indigenous plants, M-16 rounds, and any domestic farm animals I may have run across and decided to keep. I asked her for the list of authorized contraband, and she rolled her eyes. I was asking more for my amusement and sanity more than anything else. . .and thought it was decent original material until she said "Yeah, yeah, we've heard all the jokes before. Even that one."
After customs, we were locked into a little compound with tents and a Green Beans Coffee Cafe. Each tent was packed with units going home. We shared with an Army medical unit out of Baghdad. They were Michigan reservists, and the soldier sitting next to me was from Detroit. Talked about the state of the Lions and Jon Kitna this year. I gave him credit for how Barry Sanders found a way to de-construct my Bears at least once a year when he was in the league, and we laughed away an hour talking about military medicine, family, football, and all we would do when we got home.
Ten p.m. they load us into a bus caravan for the two hour drive to Kuwait International Airport. And there we sat: ten minutes became twenty, and humorous rumors swirled around the bus about how they were tricking us. As if to prove the prediction, a customs officer hops onto the bus and tells us to get out. What?! "Two weapons have been lost on the base, and the gates are in lock down" he tells us. A few of us offer our weapons if it gets us to our planes any faster, but the offer was politely declined. So we pile back out and sit around the customs compound another half hour. A few shouts to form up, and we get excited again. False alarm.
Midnight ticks over, and we get the go-ahead. Form it up! Head count! Get on those buses! My pleasure . . .
The second the wheels lift from the tarmac that plane erupted in shouts, laughter, and clapping. It's official: they're actually letting us go home.
Eight hours later, and it's a dash through the Shannon, Ireland terminal. Over a hundred and twenty very thirst Soldiers, Sailors, and Marines have a fever. And the only prescription? A pint of Guinness stout is the way to cure this malady. We order our pint and extras. After the first one goes down, it's a balderdash as we mix and match the rest of the beers on our table. The last seven hours of the flight went much better than the first eight. . .
Saturday morning landing in Cherry Point, North Carolina. The cheers and clapping bring the plane to a roaring good touchdown. Flight crew laughing and clapping right along with us. After un-loading and loading our gear several more times on the flight line, we board buses for the hour ride to Camp Lejune. Families are there waiting. We coordinate to make sure new Dads get off the buses first. And there we are: exhausted, soaked in sweat, and smelling up the bus like a petting zoo.
Nobody cares. Buses roll up. Wives are holding their cheeks, crying and trembling in their beautiful summer dresses. Dads rush off first with laughing and running children jumping into their arms. Moms join the fray. A few parents make it too, and they stand patiently in the background waiting their turn, and waving little American flags. I hang back a minute or so; just taking it all in. A Rockwellian moment comes to life outside my little bus window. And right here/right now: all somehow seems right in the world.
A few of the guys will wait before they re-unite with family. Some are from as far away as Washington state and Guam. Tim rented a cabana on the beach for Saturday and Sunday night. I finally made it out Sunday morning after finishing some paperwork. Dump the daybag, ditch the uniform, and grab a beer. It's shorts, flip-flops, and an immediate walk up the berm onto the beach. And the beach is where I stayed the entire day. The cabana was just a beer outpost. . .because I have so much to catch up on. Every second savored. And that magnificent fishing trawler is only the beginning.

18 comments:

Anonymous said...

Welcome back!

And congratulations on a job well done.

Anonymous said...

Welcome home, Carl! B-Z on a mission successfully accomplished!

Maestro

Anonymous said...

I knew the sky was bluer and the sun shone brighter today. It was you!

Bag Blog said...

You paint a beautiful Rockwellian painting. I'm so glad you are home, although I have enjoyed following your adventure. My Marine cousin (who refuses to blog) was on his way home at the same time. Milblogs unite family and friends with the military world. Thanks for sharing, and I hope you keep writing for a while.

Anonymous said...

Bravo! I don't wear a hat, so I can't tip it for you but will a curtsy do? :)
Welcome Home!
Ozarkglittergirl

Debbi (no 'e' on the end) said...

Ah tears again but this time they are good ones. I am so happy you are back on US Soil again. This is the best post you have done I must say....because of it's ending. WELCOME HOME! And have a couple of beers on me too! Packages went out to your replacement on Saturday.....and a full box of cards for everyone there. Take care Carl.

David M said...

Trackbacked by The Thunder Run - Web Reconnaissance for 09/25/2007
A short recon of what’s out there that might draw your attention, updated throughout the day...so check back often.

Anonymous said...

Welcome home.

SoCalAngel said...

Welcome home and thank you for your service sir!

Anonymous said...

I am a regular reader of your blog and just wanted to take a minute and say thanks for everything you do and it's great to have you back.

Stephanie
Concord, NC

Anonymous said...

Welcome home, Carl! I never replied to your card because you were in transit when I received it. Maybe now that you're stationary again (YAY!!), I'll send you a reply. ((HUGS))

Buck said...

Welcome home, Carl. And thanks very much.

Anonymous said...

Welcome home. Thank you for getting er done.

semper fi.

jbail

Carl said...

Quick shout out: Thanks everyone! I'm savoring every second.

Anonymous said...

Dear Carl,

Thank you for serving our beloved country...so happy you are finally home.

your friend,


Jeannie

Anonymous said...

It is so wonderful to hear that you have come home! I've read your blog for some time but haven't commented. And when I do get up the nerve, You're back! Keep writing, maybe about your experiences in acclimating back to 'normal' This reader at least would love to hear about it.
THANK YOU and THANK GOD!
Ky Woman

Papa Ray said...

We can't express how much your service and efforts mean to us.

Our little family is safer because of People like you.

And the families of those you left behind, the Iraqis are safer also because of our Military.

Someday, when your ol' like me, you will look back and say...

I did my part, and I am proud of it.

No one will ever be able to take that away from you.

But there will be those that will try.

Papa Ray
West Texas
USA

Anonymous said...

Glad to hear you are safely home Carl. Thanks for your service and God Bless. Your friend from Texas.

Kay

MGSOYP

He did didn' He.