Here it is Monday night and, well, it's a Monday what more to say. I woke up earlier, around 1 in the afternoon and I need to keep "marching" my wake-up time back to a reasonable level because I really need to be able to show up at the DMV with a ton of papers and my passport and get my "Real ID" taken care of. The email I got months ago isn't very helpful except to give me an idea of what kind of papers they want; the passport takes care of proving I'm a citizen, and tons of stuff with my address with it will prove residency.
Our Most Zionist President is proclaiming more victory over Iran, they're in their last gasp yadda yadda. I wonder if the Vietnam debacle was like that? I only remember all the stop signs on Portlock Road being spray painted with the word "WAR" so they said, in effect, "STOP WAR" and being a little kid, I just thought that (a) it was normal, and (b) we're at war somewhere and that's normal too.
There was Army/military stuff around, our going to A.L. Kilgo's to look at all the neat military surplus stuff, and it was always a fun thing when Dad steered the station wagon to the part of town where there were Quonset huts, like the one Kilgo's was set up in. I love Quonset huts to this day.
Later, when we were staying at the luxurious Schofield Sands, one morning we were awakened by tanks coming down the street, right out the window, at 7AM. If there's anything a kid loves, it's tanks coming right down the street, right out their window, at 7AM. My mother was less than thrilled. We waited eagerly to see if the tanks would come back by, but they didn't.
So those are my real-world impressions of the Vietnam "war" and they're not much to build a thesis on. But of course we got our asses kicked out of there, and my point is, apparently we charged in there for real in around 1965, and were probably proclaiming all kinds of victory and "We've got 'em now!" from then on, and could not see that we'd get rousted out of there in 1975.
We were not smart enough to see that we weren't going to win, and why would we think we would not win? We had all the planes and war materiel, all the high-tech, etc. We even had a little of what our enemy had, which was determination and guts. They just had much more - they were fighting for their homeland and against utter extermination.
This is the situation we're in with this Iran thing. The Iranis are fighting an existential war. As the saying goes, Whenever you think you haven't accomplished much, remember the US in Afghanistan took 20 years to replace the Taliban with the Taliban. Iran is Afghanistan squared.
So here I am now as an adult, seeing a fiasco not as funny signs and neat machinery but as the possible end of the US as biggest bully on the block.
I'd packed things last night, packed more things, and took them to the post office and Fedex. At least I have to pack more things.
Oh and last night I got a practice in, hurray for me. Practice is going well. It seems that some of my troubles with higher notes are not just a lack of conditioning, perhaps, but also a lack of relaxation/coordination of all those little muscles and systems I don't have names for.