Join CruisersForum Today
Mission Statement: Supporting thoughtful exchange of knowledge, values and experience among RV enthusiasts.
Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
I wish I had written this ....cj...
Old 10-12-2010, 11:57 AM   #1
Seajay is offline
Registered User
Fleetwood Owners Club
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Granite Falls, NC
Posts: 1,156
Blog Entries: 8
i REALLY WISH I HAD WRITTEN THIS....





It was a time when the snapping of American colors in the ports of the world stood for liberation from tyranny and the American sailor in his distinctive uniform and happy-go-lucky manner, stood for John Wayne principles and a universally recognized sense of decency, high ideals and uncompromised values. It was in every sense of the term, 'A great time to be an American sailor'. There were few prohibitions. They were looked upon as simply unecessary. It was a time when 'family values' were taught at family dinner tables, at schools, the nation's playing fields, scout troops, Sunday school or other institutions of worship.



We were a good people and we knew it. We plowed the world's oceans guarding her sea lanes and making her secure for the traffic of international commerce. But at eighteen, let's face it... We never thought much about the noble aspect of what we were doing. Crews looked forward to the next liberty port, the next run, home port visits, what the boat was having for evening chow, the evening movie after chow, or which barmaids were working at Bell's that evening. We were young, invincible and had our whole lives ahead of us. Without being aware of it, we were learning leadership, acceptance of responsibility and teamwork in the finest classroom in the world... A United States submarine.



It was a simpler time. Lack of complexity left us with clear-cut objectives and the 'bad guys' were clearly defined. We knew who they were, where they were and that we had the means, will and ability to send them all off to hell in a fiery package deal. We were the 'good guys' and literally wore 'white hats'. What we lacked in crew comfort, technological advancements and publicity, we made up for in continuity, stability and love of our boats and squadrons. We were a band of brothers and have remained so for over half a century. Since we were not riding what the present day submariner would call 'true submersibles', we got sunrises and sunsets at sea... The sting of wind-blown saltwater on our faces... The roll and pitch of heavy weather swells and the screech of seabirds. I can't imagine sea duty devoid of contact with these wonders.



To me, they are a very real part of being a true mariner. I'm glad I served in an era of signal lights... Flag messaging... Navigation calculation... Marines manning the gates... Locker clubs... Working girls... Hitchiking in uniform... Quartermasters, torpedomen and gunner's mates... Sea store smokes... Hotsacking... Hydraulic oil-laced coffee... Lousy mid rats... Jackassing fish from the skids to the tubes... One and two way trash dumping... Plywood dog shacks... Messy piers... A time when the Chief of the Boat could turn up at morning quarters wearing a Mexican sombrero and Jeezus sandals... When every E-3 in the sub force knew what paint scrapers, chipping hammers and wire brushes were for... When JGs with a pencil were the most dangerous things in the Navy... When the Navy mobile canteen truck was called the 'roach coach' and sold geedunk and pogey bait... When the breakfast of champions was a pitcher of Blue Ribbon, four Slim Jims, a pack of Beer Nuts, a hard-boiled egg, and a game of Eight Ball. It was a time when, if you saw a boatsailor with more than four ship's patches on his foul weather jacket, he was at least fifty years old and a lifer. A time when skippers wore hydraulic oil-stained steaming hats and carried a wad of binocular wipes in their shirt pockets. In those days, old barnicle-encrusted chiefs had more body fat than a Hell's Angel, smoked big, fat, lousy smelling cigars or 'chawed plug', and came with a sewer digger's vocabulary. It was a time where heterosexuals got married to members of the opposite sex or patronized 'working girls', and non-heterosexuals went Air Force... Or would Peace Corps.


It was a good time... For some of us, the best time we would ever have. There was a certain satisfaction to be found in serving one's country without the nation you so dearly loved having to promise you enlistment bonuses, big whopping education benefits, feather bed shore duty, or an 'A' school with a sauna and color TV. It was a time when if you told a cook you didn't eat Spam or creamed chipped beef, everybody laughed and you went away hungry... And if you cussed a messcook, you could find toenail clippings in your salad.



Our generation visited cemetaries where legends of World War II undersea service were issued their grass blankets, after receiving their pine peacoats and orders to some old hull number moored at the big silver pier in the sky. We were family... Our common heritage made us brothers. There came a point where we drew a line through our names on the Watch, Quarter and Station Bill, told our shipmates we'd see them in hell, shook hands with the COB, paid back the slush fund, told the skipper 'goodbye', and picked up a disbursing chit and your DD-214.




We went up on Hampton Boulevard, bought a couple of rounds at Bells, kissed the barmaids, gave Thelma a hug, then went out to spend the rest of our lives wishing we could hear, "Single up all lines...", just one more time.


MAY GOD BLESS THOSE WW2 VETS

__________________
  Reply With Quote
   
Join the #1 RV Forum Today - It's Totally Free!

iRV2.com RV Community - Are you about to start a new improvement on your RV or need some help with some maintenance? Do you need advice on what products to buy? Or maybe you can give others some advice? No matter where you fit in you'll find that iRV2 is a great community to join. Best of all it's totally FREE!

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest so you have limited access to our community. Please take the time to register and you will gain a lot of great new features including; the ability to participate in discussions, network with other RV owners, see fewer ads, upload photographs, create an RV blog, send private messages and so much, much more!

Old 10-15-2010, 05:32 PM   #2
skipwil is offline
Senior Member
skipwil's Avatar


Appalachian Campers
Fleetwood Owners Club
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Greeneville-North East Tn.
Posts: 622
Would I need permission to use this at our Convention in Lenoir? If so may I?
Safe travels...

__________________
JOE.. LEO(ret.)-active USCGAUX-
'01 FLEETWOOD DISCOVERY-'03 VUE pushing
ck. our website:www.overmountainsams.com
  Reply With Quote
   
Old 10-15-2010, 06:08 PM   #3
RickO is offline
Community Moderator
RickO's Avatar


Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Litchfield Park, Arizona
Posts: 5,167
Very well said.
__________________
Rick, Nancy, Peanut & Lola our Westie Dogs & Bailey the Sheltie.

2007 Itasca Ellipse 40FD
  Reply With Quote
   
Old 10-16-2010, 12:48 AM   #4
Seajay is offline
Registered User
Fleetwood Owners Club
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Granite Falls, NC
Posts: 1,156
Blog Entries: 8
Quote:
Originally Posted by skipwil View Post
Would I need permission to use this at our Convention in Lenoir? If so may I?
Safe travels...
Ok by me my friend. Like I said ...... I wish I had written this and I bet the true author would be proud to be quoted. I know I sure would.

I dont know bout you but I can almost ''smell'' the berthing area he talks about and, though I was not a sub sailor, I can relate to a lot of the statements about life on a ''boat''. I could see the ''ladies of the evening'' he made reference to and taste the beer going down and then coming back up later.

If a person is or was ''NAVY'' and he served sea duty, some part of this will hit him right between the running lights......

This author dont need a paint brush to paint a picture. Just a typewriter...

God bless our troops and bring them home soon and safe
God bless our vets... ALL GAVE SOME ....SOME GAVE ALL
and remember this ...
EVERY FREEDOM WE HAVE WAS EARNED BY SOME PERSON IN BATTLE. FREEDOM AINT FREE FOLKS.... SOMEONE PAID FOR IT.....

Nuff said I guess ......
__________________
  Reply With Quote
   
i wish i had
Old 10-16-2010, 10:03 AM   #5
shailenago is offline
Junior Member
Join Date: Oct 2010
Posts: 1
This is a wonderful post. The things given are unanimous and needs to be appreciated by everyone.
--------
shailenago
Motorhome Accessories Uk
  Reply With Quote
   
Old 10-20-2010, 02:31 PM   #6
Madisons is offline
Junior Member
Join Date: Oct 2010
Posts: 29
I think that all of us that served can relate to this, though not without a twinge of melancholy. It is youth, country, patriotism all rolled into one passage.

How nice of you to share this with those of us who can remember.

Thanks...John

__________________
" there are no coincidences"
  Reply With Quote
   
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Need master cylinder for 88 Monaco keypontrikin Monaco Owner's Forum 17 12-31-2011 02:42 PM
So What Behavior Gets a Member Reprimanded? RickO Just Conversation 25 07-30-2010 04:42 AM
Fleetwood Selling PopUp Division Route 66 Pop Up Discussion 4 06-22-2008 03:17 PM
HOW DO YOU DECIDE WHO TO MARRY? (written by kids) apackof2 RV'ing Humor & Crazy but True Stories 3 03-29-2007 11:50 AM
blinds here are opened ladyrvr66 Just Conversation 35 08-02-2006 04:47 AM

Download our Mobile App






1% for the Planet
» Upcoming Rallies
No events scheduled in
the next 365 days.
» iRV2 on facebook

Our Communities

Our communities encompass many different hobbies and interests, but each one is built on friendly, intelligent membership.

» More about our Communities

Automotive Communities

Our Automotive communities encompass many different makes and models. From U.S. domestics to European Saloons.

» More about our Automotive Communities

RV & Travel Trailer Communities

Our RV & Travel Trailer sites encompasses virtually all types of Recreational Vehicles, from brand-specific to general RV communities.

» More about our RV Communities

Marine Communities

Our Marine websites focus on Cruising and Sailing Vessels, including forums and the largest cruising Wiki project on the web today.

» More about our Marine Communities


Copyright 2002-2012 Social Knowledge, LLC All Rights Reserved.
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 02:22 PM.