Well... Lessee here.
Since Tuesday morning I've had a total of about 7 hours sleep, of course not consecutive. Since we're taking off to set up the big bad field command next week, we needed to have a little practice. The solution? Practice, of course. Set up a semi-field command inside the barracks, run it for a bit, then take it down and set it back up again.
This was also our first time with the new lineup of squads, going from five to three. I wound up on squad Charlie, which unfortunately always makes me think of
this charming story of a mentally lacking janitor when I hear it mentioned. This is due primarily to the composition of our team, which is made up of whatever was left over after the other squads were decided.
It was gonna be rough and tough, but I figured "Hey, at least I'll get to do something else than setting up goddamn barbed wire".
That's when the sergeant said "...squad Charlie will be in charge of barbed wire. Also, the way we tend to do things is that each squad sticks to their assigned area throughout their service year so they become specialists and do things bigger, harder, and faster."
Damn. Wellp, looks like I'm gonna be teaching Daniel the Death Slinky to heel and stay whenever we're out picnicking from here on out. Joy.
Alright, so enough about the Mutant Bedsprings From Hell... What happened was we spent eleven hours setting up Camp von Shite, got a bit of griping from the sergeants for it, and then started running the thing.
The way it works is that we have three different shifts... Work, Ready, and Rest, one squad on each at any one time. Charlie got the awesome luck of starting off as the resting team, so we were allowed to run back across the barracks to our sleeping quarters and snooze from 10 in the evening to 1 in the morning.
The catch? We learned about this at 11:15, giving us enough time to go back, take off all our equipment (we were not allowed to sleep in our clothes, like the dudes who started on Ready), sleep for half an hour, put our things on again, and make our way back to the camp.
Fresh and rested, we hobbled back to command to take the whole thing apart. Five hours later, we're good to go. No rest for the weary however, because we need to set it up again, and beat our previous ridiculous newbie time. Time to roll out the wire again...
Again, several hours pass. Finally, we get things set up (actually in fairly decent time this go-around) and start running it. Starting where they left off, Charlie got to go straight into four hours of keeping the place alive and running.
Yeah... By this time, I've been awake and working for so long I've actually gotten nauseous from lack of sleep. Good times, man, good times.
But, hey, we had the awesome stretch of 8 hours sleep ahead of us! Why should we complain? We powered through our four hours at post and nearly cheered when we got the signal to head back to the Ready Room and sleep on the floor.
What I wasn't aware of just then was that the Ready team
also has a guard post they need to man. Just the one though, the rest of the shift is naptime and eating-time.
I got paired up to take the second shift, which means I'd be going from hour 2 to hour 3. This means an hour of sleep before and two after, right?
Well, you still need to make your way back through the barracks across truly evil ice and then into the rec room. When we got there, we slacked about for a few minutes before someone came in and started giving us a detailed brief of what would come next. Then I ate my packed breakfast. Hour of sleep? Didn't happen. The other dude on my hour got 15 minutes.
Then we head out and take an hour (plus a little, since we were so cavalier as to meet up 5 minutes before hour 2, as we had been instructed) on watch. The cold, dull, sleepy duty is made worse by the relief including a dimbulb who overslept and extended our shift by another 10 minutes.
Finally with sleep close at hand, we head back to the Ready Room and await our just reward...
...which doesn't come, because the two hours we would've had happened to bump into breakfast in the mess and the usual morning gathering at 7:30, which we were ordered to attend. Hello 30 more minutes of "sleep".
We stare down yet another usual service day of fixing up the field command, all hands on deck. Late in the evening, we get a real live field brief regarding the night's shifts.
Gagging for some Z's, we practically shouted in glee when the sarge announced that we would continue where we left of and go right into 4 hours of real bedtime. Sounds great, right?
Well, complications arise... There's a bit of uncertainty, and we get the order to sit in the briefing area and await further orders. No running off to bed here. Time slips by...
...and continues to slip by...
...until finally we get the go-ahead for a full 4 hour shift at sleep, starting immediately. In the meantime I'd managed to catch a minute or two of uncomfortable shuteye while propped up in a chair, so I'm ready for the real deal.
Well... Yeah. This is the last leg of the field command's life, so we need to do something special. All normal posts are cut so people can get some sleep, but the base still needs a couple dudes to run maintenance on the various systems. Lucky me, I get first shift (midnight to 1:00AM).
We spend an hour doing an actually quite decent job of fixing up the place for staff inspection the next day, and then finally our relief arrives, including the squad leader we borrowed from Officer School.
This lovely chap came bringing a message... Namely, that one of the men on our team had other standing orders and would not be able to take his hour at maintenance. The question now was which one of us would take the extra shift.
Not content with losing the second round of Rock-Paper-Scissors (a surprising number of military decisions are made this way), I inquired about a couple of the other squad members, who I couldn't remember being ever given a shift.
As it turns out, the squad leader couldn't remember giving the one chap a shift either. So it was decided then that I would head back, inform him that he would be taking the shift from 3:00-4:00AM, and start sleeping like I meant it.
I did as asked, relaying the message and the crawling into bed to experience the most painfully beautiful sensation I've ever felt... Namely, lying in bed with the prospect of multiple hours of sleep ahead of me (we got the okay to sleep all the way to 6 in the morning, since we wouldn't be needed for another shift, but we would be required to meet up for the briefing at 7:30), without five layers of essential equipment.
...around 2:15AM, someone from Charlie comes in and relays the message that I've got the 3-4 shift again, since the other dude actually
did have an assignment.
Bad vibes, man... Bad vibes.
Yeah, I think that's about all I wanted to gripe about just now... Gonna head off to bed pretty soon here so I can devour as many hours of awesome as I can manage, now that we're back on normal schedule and the base has been dismantled for the last time (this week).