And the Kid Moves On
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DLI (the Defense Language Institute) is tough, and even basic training was no preparation for what the kid landed in when he got his language. He was informed right up front that washouts were common, that the program would require the best he had, that a lot of people wouldn’t make it through. He figured, in spite of that, that he had it aced.

He, like a lot of other smart people, had spent most of his life to that date sliding by on smarts without ever exerting much effort — and when he was first presented with the reality that he was going to have to work harder than he could imagine to get accomplish what he wanted, reality kicked his ass.

I’m delighted to say that he stepped up. He kicked back. When he was told he couldn’t make it, he said “Watch me,” and proved he could. Last night I got his call that he’s passed his third set of tests, winning the right to stay in his language and the DLI. I knew he had it in him. He’s proud of himself; he’s doing something big, and worthwhile, and hard, and he’s learning that he has the toughness to succeed in spite of failure, and in spite of obstacles.

That’s my kid.

So … Monterey
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The kid called last night. He’s got a room with one of the friends he made in basic, overlooking mountains, with the evening temperature hovering around 60˚. It was dusk, a fog was rolling in, and he was elated that he only had to share a room with one person, and that showers were private.

He’s already been warned that the dropout rate for his school is brutal, that washbacks are common, that this course he has chosen is incredibly difficult and will continue to be incredibly difficult the entire time he’s doing it.

In spite of the warnings, he’s happy. He’s discovered that he can do a hell of a lot more than he thought he could. He can run, do sit-ups, do push-ups. He can get through a gas chamber, coming out the other side still standing and functioning, and leave the TI impressed that it’s possible for one human being to produce that much mucus on short notice. He can pass an obstacle course, be screamed at and still function, hit a target with a weapon, work with teammates, strive for the greater good. He’s looking at a future he won through his own hard work, and the fact that he still has hard work ahead of him is something he can view as a challenge, not as an obstacle.

He’s not the same kid he was three years ago. He’s grown in good ways. And though I’d love to take all the credit, I can’t. I can take credit for telling him from an early age that I believed in him, and for making sure he knew that there would be no gravy train — that I was damned sure he could make his dreams into realities, but that he was going to have to do it on his own.

That was hard. But it was what my parents did for me.

As a parent, we want good things for our kids. As a parent, I’ve come to believe the worst thing we can do is try to give them the things they need to earn for themselves.

We don’t owe our kids a free ride, free college education, everything they ever wanted — and we do them vast disservice if we give them those things. If we make their way smooth, we allow them to be weak. Not good for them, not good for us, not good for anyone.

We owe our kids our guidance, our love, and our faith that if we refuse to hand them the entitlement package we’re told we should give them, they will be able to develop the backbone to carry themselves through life well, and will be able to take the values we’ve offered them and make something good of them. At the age of twenty, and going into the third year of pursuing his goals actively, the kid is just barely getting started. But I think he’s starting well.

The Kid Graduated Basic
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Yesterday, my older son finished the last of Air Force basic training and graduated. He has base liberty and a couple of days of town pass before he and several of the guys he graduated with go on to their tech school, the Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center, at Presidio of Monterey, where they’ll be taking tests like this. He’s excited, intimidated, and determined.

And I’m very proud of him.

Air Force Kid Update
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After several weeks spent out of commission with a messed-up leg, the Air Force kid has RTT’d, or returned to training.

He’s doing well, and we finally have a working address for him again, so I can write him another letter and send him some more pictures of his cat. (And an additional supply of cat hair.)

Second Weeker
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The Air Force kid called yesterday. He’s in his second week of basic now. And he sounded much, much better.

I’m relieved.

He’s learning things, too. Along with folding underwear in six-inch squares and polishing boots and discovering the gig line and so on, he’s discovered that A) in chapel, nobody yells at you, making this a pleasant, still two-hour break, even for an agnostic, and B) when they tell you to drink your water, they mean it. (Collapsed while running, required IV fluids. Has sworn he will NOT do THAT again.)

Got “The Phone Call” Last Night
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My son had only a couple of minutes to talk, this being his first phone call back from basic training, and Matt picked up. I heard, "Hey!" then nothing but air for a bit, then, "Dude, I sounded exactly like that the first time I talked to MY dad. Just hang in."

Followed by the recitation and repeat, with scribbling, of the longest mailing address in the history of the world. Addresses in England are significantly shorter.

Matt then handed the phone over to me. The kid is not having an easy time of it. "… but I’m doing better every day," he concluded. "

I told him I was proud of him, and that I loved him, and then we were out of time.

I am proud of him.

My Air Force Kid
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So today is the kid’s first full day of basic training. He’s been up for a while getting yelled at — he’ll get the haircut and the BC glasses and the uniforms this week. I won’t get to hear from him for a while, and when I do, it will be a phone call just to tell me that he’s all right, and where I can send his mail, and will be very, very short. I’m told I’ll be able to hear his TI yelling at him in the background as he makes the call.

I’m really proud of my kid — proud of his courage, and the fact that he’s taking six years out of his life to serve his country, proud of the fact that he chose tough career fields and tested into something tremendously difficult. Proud that he’s able to look at the next six years and be excited, not intimidated. So he gets his own topic and a specially designed topic icon. I’ll update as I get news.

Rank Recognition Made Easy
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Since the kid is now only a few days away from going off to basic training (Air Force), my friend the major sent this to me to help him out. It’s too funny not to share.

General

Faster than a speeding bullet.
More powerful than a locomotive.
Leaps tall buildings in a single bound.
Walks on water.
Lunches with God, but must pick up tab.

Colonel

Almost as fast as a speeding bullet.
More powerful than a shunting engine on a steep incline.
Leaps short buildings with a single bound.
Walks on water if sea is calm.
Talks to God.

Lieutenant-Colonel

Faster than an energetically thrown rock.
Almost as powerful as a speeding bullet.
Leaps short buildings with a running start in favorable winds.
Walks on water of indoor swimming pools if lifeguard is present.
May be granted audience with God if special request is approved at least
three working days in advance.

Major

Can fire a speeding bullet with tolerable accuracy.
Loses tug-of-war against anything mechanical.
Makes impressively high marks when trying to leap tall buildings.
Swims well.
Is occasionally addressed by God, in passing.

Captain

Can sometimes handle firearm without shooting self.
Is run over by trains.
Barely clears outhouse.
Dog paddles.
Mumbles to self.

1st Lieutenant

Is dangerous to self and comrades if armed and unsupervised.
Recognizes trains two out of three times.
Runs into tall buildings.
Can stay afloat if properly instructed in the use of life jacket and water wings.
Talks to walls.

2nd Lieutenant

Can be trusted with either gun or ammunition but never both.
Must have train ticket pinned to jacket and mittens tied to sleeves.
Falls over doorsteps while trying to enter tall buildings.
Plays in Mud puddles.
Stutters.

Brand New Butter Bar

Under no circumstances to be issued with gun or ammunition, and must even be closely supervised when handling sharp pieces of paper – staples are right out.
Says: “Look at choo choo!”
Not allowed inside buildings of any size.
Makes good boat anchor.
Mere existence makes God shudder.

Chief Master Sergeant

Catches hyper sonic armor piercing fin stabilized discarding sabot depleted uranium long rod penetrators in his teeth and eats them.
Kicks bullet trains off their tracks.
Uproots tall buildings and walk under them.
Freezes water with a single glance; parts it with trifling gesture.

Is God.

HE PASSED!
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Mark passed the Linguistics test! OED, Avionics, and Ground Radio Communications are all off the table. His recruiter said he was eliminating them from the list of choices.

Apparently the Air Force really needs linguists.

He was so happy, and I’m so proud of him. And now maybe now I’ll be able to concentrate and get some writing done.

How MEPS Went
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It’s 3:19 AM, my time. 0319 hours, my son’s time. He’ll be getting up at 0345 to head for MEPS for his day of specialty testing.

He passed the MEPS enlistment process yesterday. It was, according to my son, tedious and occasionally embarrassing and LOOOONG and full of hurry-up-and-wait, but he got through it. Took the oath to defend the Constitution, and is now enlisted in the USAF. Went with a six-year option if available, which is worth an extra stripe and increased pay right after basic; good decision. He’s doing something valuable, and I am tremendously proud of him.

I also want to smack him on the head with a salami — preferably one of those hard, mean winter salamis — because …. well. The young serviceman gets to choose his career fields from a long, long list of options (based on how well he did on the ASVAB, plus other things — my kid had all options open.) So he gives me his career list, in order of preferance: Linguistics, Ground Radio Communications, Bomber Avionics, F-15 F-11 Avionics … Explosive Ordnance Disposal …

Yeah. Could have been a medic, could have been in intelligence, could have been anything. LOTS of jobs in the Air Force. Explosive Ordnance Disposal. What you and I would think of as Bomb Squad.

Which is why I’m up at this hour, sort of writing. You have any spare prayers or candles to light or whatever, that a kid could do really, really well on his Linguistics Aptitude exam, this particular mom would deeply appreciate them. Make them out to Mark What-Were-You-THINKING?

And thanks.