Old habits die hard.

I was watching a show recently and there was a scene where my brain screamed, “Inzar Qital” at me.  Huh?  It’s “battle alert” in Arabic. The hero was going into a bad situation and my brain was screaming warnings.  In Arabic.  All the really bad/dangerous things I experience, as well as normal stuff like weaponry and aircraft, pop into my fevered little head in Arabic first.

Would you like to guess where all my “Spidey Sense” is rooted? They did a mighty fine job at Defense Language Institute and my other schools.  My Sea Daddy Pete also encouraged me to think in Arabic. We all did it. It made us better linguists. Better spooks. Better warriors.

So, 23 years after I last put on the uniform (right about this time of year!) I’m still processing all the heavy stuff in my language.  I think that’s pretty cool. Please excuse me if it slips out of my mouth. I will translate if you ask.

That is all. Return to your duty station. Yella! (move it!)

Greasy paper grocery bag.

My wife and I went to a fish fry tonight.  There’s a bar at the end of our block. We go once a year (that will be increasing) to have dinner there, as they have a really good Lenten fish fry.  Crispy fish and decent french fries with a loose cole slaw.  Mighty fine with a Diet Coke and a couple of lemon wedges.

On the walk home I thought about the best fish fries in my life – Appleton, Wisconsin and my grandmother’s place.  The joint we went to had a lot of names over the years, but it was probably best known as “Bleier’s” by the locals.  Might still be for all I know.

It had been owned by Rocky Bleier.  Rocky was an amazing fellow and his story is well worth reading *(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rocky_Bleier)* when you have a moment.  The bar was there a long time and his family owned the place,  http://www.classicwisconsin.com/fishfrys/damned.htm but it was sold long ago.  In my day it was the place were you called in the order and then sat in the lobby with all the other customers waiting for your order to come out.  There was a bar there and the adults would knock back a cold one while they waited. It was worth the wait.

You’d get it back to Grandma’s and the kids would rush the table. The adults did the same thing. There was a frenzy as the packages were unloaded and fries and fish spread about the table. Little cups of tartar sauce and packages of ketchup for the fries. The bag was so greasy you could almost see through it by the time you’d driven the 8 blocks or so to where  she was living (she never moved very far out of that part of town. I’m the same way now. Guess it’s a family trait.)

After dinner there’d be icecream or popsicles. I still think it was the best darned fish dinner around.

My final trip was almost thirty years ago.  I’d gone up to visit my grandmother before I went into the service.  We went to have dinner on a Friday night.  I was kind of shocked when my grandmother ordered a beer and knocked it back with her fish.  She laughed at the expression on my face. I guess it was kind of silly to even be shocked.  She lived life to the fullest and made it to 96 years of age.  A beer and some fish were no doubt part of the formula.

Now, at past the 1/2 way point in my own life, I’m enjoying those memories of years ago. The smell of fish and fries, the greasy paper bag and the family all together for dinner on a summer’s evening in Appleton. We can’t go back to those times, but it sure is wonderful to have them with us in our memories.

Maybe next week I’ll order a beer and let it sit on the table for Margaret.  I think she’d like that.

Some of that there updatin’ stuff…

I’m cleaning up the Belize items over the next few days. No big content changes, but the joys of using a microkeyboard showed up with bad typos.  Some of the photos are correct in my media library but display incorrectly.  I will fix them as well.  Video that’s sideways?  Sorry, stuck with that one.

To alleviate the pain of all these changes, I offer you a picture of our worship on the rooftop on the final night of the trip.  The band is “Malaria” and the God is the true and living God. It was a beautiful way to end our trip.

Worship on the roof by the light of the moon