| Living Aboard Ship |
It is difficult to
describe living aboard a Navy ship to someone who has not experienced
it. Here are a few things that occur while living aboard a Navy
ship, and things that you can do at home to simulate them.
Aircraft Maintenance:
Have your father in-law (Squadron Maintenance Officer) set 20
unachievable goals on Monday morning with the promise that if
they are achieved there will be liberty for whole family on
Sunday. Have the entire family work 18-hour days for the entire
week while your father in-law goes golfing. Achieve all the
goals. Upon your father in-law’ return Saturday night, have him
announce that due to operational commitments one of the
following will occur: the duty section (1/3 of family) will have
to work Sunday or liberty is canceled.
Do this for couple of years and then reward your father
in-law with a promotion and a medal for superior operational
readiness.
Aircraft Maintenance:
Purchase a beat up 30 year old car (aircraft).
Keep the following schedule to the letter and with
accurate records of everything. Have three highly qualified
people inspect the car before driving (preflight), then have a
16-year-old who just got his license and knows nothing about
cars inspect it again. Have him drive the car as if it were a
rented Corvette with full coverage insurance (flight ops). When
he returns have him tell you everything his one month of vast
experience tells him is wrong, using vague phrases. Have three
people inspect the car (Post flight/Daily inspection) and the
next morning. even though the car has not moved, have three
people re-inspect it. Every third day replace the alternator in
the car before driving. Every 7, 14, 28 and 56 days, take one
section of the car apart and then reassemble it. Every 128 days
take the entire car apart and then reassemble it.
Aircraft Maintenance:
Wash and wax all the cars on your block once a week in the rain
to simulate washing aircraft. Have a 10-year old neighbor kid
quality check the work and tell you all the places you missed.
Battle Lanterns:
Install flashlights around the house where you can bump into
them or bang you head against them. Point each flashlight at
important items, such as the sofa, doorways, or the stove.
Occasionally turn the house’s electric power off and run around
turning on all the flashlights.
Being a Deck Seaman:
Spend 5 years working at McDonald’s, and NOT get promoted.
Berthing:
Cut a twin mattress in half and enclose three sides of your bed.
Add a roof that prevents you from sitting up and place the whole
bed on a platform that is four feet off the floor. Place a small
dead animal under the bed to simulate the smell of your
bunkmate's socks.
Berthing:
Four hours after you go to sleep, have your wife whip open the
curtain, shine a flashlight in your eyes, and mumble, "Sorry
wrong rack.”
Berthing:
Go from house to house in your neighborhood when you need a
place to sleep. Climb in the closest empty bed. The owner will
wake you up when they want to sleep. It is called “hot racking.”
Berthing:
Install a fluorescent lamp on the bottom of your coffee table
and lie under it to read books to simulate laying in a rack.
Berthing:
Keep the bedroom thermostat at 50 degrees and use only a thin
blanket for warmth.
Berthing:
Raise your bed to within 6 inches of the ceiling.
Berthing:
Replace bedroom door with a curtain.
Berthing:
Set your alarm to go off at ten-minute intervals for the first
hour of sleep to simulate the various times the watch standers
and night crew bump around and wake you up.
Berthing:
Sleep on the shelf in your closet.
Berthing:
Stack all beds on top of one another in the closet. Stow all
your clothing and possessions in a 36" x 18" x 12" closet.
Bilges:
Fill your basement with ten inches of sewage water, pump it out,
clean up the mess, and paint everything in the basement gray.
Ceremonies
(such as retirements, change of command, and award ceremonies):
Have entire family dress in their best clothes and stand in the
sun for an hour without moving a muscle while your grandfather
reads Prologue to the Canterbury Tales.
Chow, Mid Rats:
Wake up every night and have a peanut butter and jelly sandwich
on stale bread. Optional: canned ravioli or cold soup.
Chow:
Cook all your food blindfolded, groping for any seasoning you
can reach. Fry everything and serve cold. Note: You must not
gain weight on this diet or you will be singled out for the 'fat
person' program.
Chow:
For meals, have the family stand in long lines with a bunch or
smelly, dirty mechanics, only to find that when you turn comes,
most of the food is gone.
Chow:
Have week old fruit and vegetables delivered and wait two weeks
before eating them.
Chow:
Post a menu on the refrigerator door informing your family that
you are having steak for dinner. Then make them wait in line for
at least an hour, when they finally get to the kitchen, tell
them that you are out of steak, but you have dried ham or hot
dogs. Repeat daily until they do not pay attention to the menu
any more, they just ask for hot dogs.
Chow:
Serve "Stuffed Cabbage Rolls" for dinner and the next evening
strip off the cabbage leaves and serve the same thing calling it
"Beef Porcupines."
Chow:
Use 18 scoops of coffee per pot and allow it to sit for 5-6 days
before drinking.
Chow:
Use fresh milk for only two days after each port visit.
Chow:
When baking a cake, prop up one side of the pan so one side is 3
inches higher than the other side. Level it using lard frosting.
Chow:
When making sandwiches, leave the bread out for six days, or
until it is hard and stale.
Communications:
When talking to your wife drop every third word in your sentence
to simulate using a ship to shore telephone.
Deployment:
Have your 5-year-old give you a haircut every two weeks.
Deployment:
Have your neighbor collect all your mail and deliver it once a
month. Instruct them to trash every fifth item and to send every
some mail randomly to other addresses.
Deployment:
Invite 200 to 1000 of your 'not so closest' friends to come
over. Board up all the windows and doors to your house for six
months. After 6 months, take down the boards so people can
leave. However, since you and one third of the 'friends' cannot
leave until the next day since you are on duty, wave at your
family through the front window of your home.
Deployment:
Shower, eat, and sleep with the above-mentioned friends never
more than an arm's length away. Instruct 10% of the 'friends'
NOT to shower on a regular basis and an additional 10% NOT to
change clothes more than once a month.
Deployment:
Unplug all radios and TVs to completely cut yourself off from
the outside world. Have a neighbor bring you a Time, Newsweek,
or Proceedings from five years ago to keep you abreast of
current events.
Drill, Fire:
Periodically, shut off all power at the main circuit breaker and
run around shouting "Fire! Fire! Fire!" and then restore power.
Drill, General Quarters:
Shut all doors and windows in the kitchen, turn the heat up, set
off the smoke alarm, and then have each family member put on
head phones, a long sleeve shirt buttoned at the collar, long
pants with socks pulled over the cuffs, gloves, and a ski mask,
put a pot over their head, put on a life preserver, and carry a
full face swim mask as they run into the kitchen and stand by an
assigned appliance. When they arrive, they are to yell "Stove
(refrigerator, microwave, etc.) manned and ready." Then they
must stand there for four hours doing nothing, not eating or
drinking, or going to the bathroom. After four hours, they are
to yell "Stove (refrigerator, microwave, etc.) secured,” and
then return to their regular activities.
Drill, General Quarters:
When your children have been in bed for 3 hours, run into their
room with a megaphone, and shout at the top of your lungs that
your home is under attack, and order them to man their battle
stations.
Drill, Man Overboard:
Every so often, throw your cat into the swimming pool, shout
"man overboard, ship recovery!"
Drill:
Set your alarm clock to go off at random times during the night.
When it goes off, jump out of bed, get dressed as fast as you
can, then run into your backyard and break out the garden hose.
Drills, Fire:
Twice a week at 2:30 in the morning, sneak into the children’s
room, ring a bell and yell though a bullhorn "Fire! Fire! Fire!
There is a Class Alpha Fire in the kitchen!" Just as soon as
they get dressed and start to run, yell, "This is a drill!"
Drills:
Designate a closet in your house as a repair locker, equip it
with firefighting gear, and assign family members to man it
during drills. Then hold fire, smoke, and flooding drills every
day.
Dungarees:
Sew back pockets to the front of your pants.
Electrical Boxes:
Mount all power switch and outlet boxes on the outside of the
wall at a level that will guarantee that you bang your elbow or
snag your clothing on them.
Electrical Items:
Once a month, have an electrician certify as 'safe' and hang a
tag on every electrical appliance you own.
Engine Room:
Install humidifiers throughout your house and fill them with a
mixture of half water and half motor oil. Remove the muffler
from your lawn mower and bring it into the house. Turn the heat
up to 120 degrees and run the humidifiers and lawn mower
constantly.
Engine Room:
Lighting off the Engines. After starting your car, sit and watch
the gauges, and let it run for four hours before going anywhere
to ensure the engine is properly "lit off."
Engine Room:
Sit in front of your kitchen stove for six hours. Look at
nothing but the stove. Maintain a log entry of the position of
all the knobs. Have your son randomly report to the kitchen
"conditions normal" in the house. Have him randomly ask
permission to turn on various appliances in the house. Grant him
permission to start half of them, and have him immediately
report the condition of the each appliance.
Engine Room:
Sit in your car and let it run for 4 hours before going
anywhere. This is to ensure your engine is properly "lit off.”
First few weeks of a deployment: Buy six months of food and
supplies for the family and pile it on the on top of furniture,
fixtures, and the floor in the bedrooms, dining room, kitchen,
living room, basement, garage, and along the sides of all the
hallways.
Flight Deck.
FOD Walk Down. Assemble the family at one end of the yard. Have
them line up side by side to the full width of the yard and then
have them walk slowly across the yard, heads down with no
talking, and pick up every twig or pebble. The purpose of the
walk down is to prevent the lawn mower from sucking something
into the blades that will damage them.
Flight Deck:
Assemble your neighbors in the street with push brooms. Turn on
all the garden hoses available and use extra strength dish
detergent to wash the street. When half-done, open fire hydrants
drench everyone.
Flight Deck:
Park all of your neighbors’ cars in a seemingly random order
along the street. Change the order 3-4 times a day while other
cars are speeding down the street.
Flight Operations, Night:
Wear earplugs. Have your neighbor stand across the street on the
darkest of nights with a flashlight with a cone on the end so
that he can signal you when the coast is clear of oncoming cars.
When you're halfway across the street, have him change the
signal as a car is ten feet from you and blaring its horn. Break
into a sprint and trip over a manhole cover.
Flight Operations:
At random intervals during the day and night, have people drag
chains on the roof, jump up and down, pound the roof with
sledgehammers, and shake the house.
Flight Operations:
Stand in the street in dismal weather and direct traffic for 8
hours. Go onto your porch, eat a cold sandwich with warm milk,
curl up on the floor for a short nap, and then go back to
directing traffic.
Head:
Buy 50 cases of toilet paper, lock up all but two rolls, and
then keep these two wet.
Head:
Divide bathroom shower with three partitions. Remove shower
nozzles and replace them with kitchen sink dish sprayers, make
it impossible to keep the water at a constant temperature.
Head:
Do not flush the toilet for five days to simulate the smell of
40 people using the same commode.
Head:
Get up late at night, walk carefully to the bathroom with only
red nightlights to see by, groggily step into the bathroom and
step into 4 inches of sewage that has overflowed onto the floor
due to one of your children flushing a shirt that clogged the
sewage system.
Head:
Lock the bathroom twice a day for a four-hour period.
Head:
On random days, either turn off the hot water or the cold water
to the shower, and then on weekends inform your family that they
used too much water during the week and as a result all
showering is secured.
Head:
Pick random times during the day to lock the bathroom for
cleaning.
Head:
Remove the glass bathroom sink and replace it with a scratched
metal one.
Head:
Screw a framed copy of the UCMJ (Uniform Code of Military
Justice) to the wall next to the commode so you always see it
while using the commode.
Head:
When showering, randomly shut off either the hot or the cold
water.
Job:
Every four hours, check the fluid level in your car's radiator.
Check the tire pressure and replace air lost from excessive
pressure checks. Be sure to place red tag on ignition stating
"DANGER: DO NOT OPERATE" while you perform these checks.
Job:
Put on a clean white suit and then change the oil in your car.
Job:
Stand in the middle of a speeding subway car and try to do
precise work using power equipment.
Job:
Study the owner's manual for all household appliances. Routinely
take an appliance apart and put it back together.
Laundry:
Gather all the dirty laundry and mix the clothing in a pile. Rip
off every other button, pour bleach directly on the pile, stuff
the washing machine to maximum capacity, DO NOT separate by
colors. Partially dry items and redistribute the "clean" items
in a random fashion among the group.
Laundry:
Have everyone in your family hang two pillowcases next to their
beds with large clothespins and mark them "white" and "blue" for
their dirty clothes. On laundry day, put the pillowcases into
two separate trash bags and designate a junior family member to
drag them to the laundry room.
Laundry:
Periodically wash the laundry with saltwater, bang zippers with
a hammer, break buttons in half, and half dry the clothes. Have
family put names on all clothing items and have then pick
through a bag for their clean clothes.
Liberty:
Enter an exotic foreign port and be told that only officers will
have permission to leave the ship.
Liberty:
On liberty in a white shirt and white pants (Dress Whites) eat
out with friends at a local Italian restaurant;
Liberty:
Spend 2 weeks in the red-light districts of Europe, and call it
"world travel."
Liberty:
Submit a special request chit (form) to your father-in-law,
requesting permission to leave your house before 1500 (3 pm).
You must submit the request chit two days in advance.
Instruct your father-in-law to hide for added realism. When you
find him, listen to a lecture on "work ethics and
responsibility."
Lines:
Stand in line at the local mini-mart to buy a lottery ticket
when the jackpot is around $100 million.
Lines:
Stand in line for an hour at ship store only to find the store
is out of sodas and the chocolate bars have white spots due to
their age.
Lookout:
When it rains. Get two empty coke bottles, tie them together,
and hang them around your neck. Go outside and stand in the rain
for four hours. From time to time, look through the coke bottles
and observe the horizon and lightning.
Maintenance:
Perform a weekly disassembly and inspection of your lawn mower.
If you miss a week or use the wrong tool, hold a trial and
restrict yourself to the house for a month. On six-month
intervals, disassemble, inspect, and reassemble your car engine
using only a 12" Crescent wrench and screwdriver.
Maintenance:
With the help of your two six-year old nephews and a 1976
manual, replace the starter in your 1985 car, working only from
the top. Have your father-in-law remind you every 3 minutes that
you have 15 minutes to finish because the car is needed for the
next trip.
Make Way:
When in a hurry, run through the hall yelling “Make Way!” and
require everyone to stand against the wall and you run by.
Medical:
Instruct your doctor to dispense only "aspirin" (APC,
all-purpose capsule) to you no matter what the ailment or
complaint.
Morning Quarters:
Have your mother write down everything the family will be doing
during the day, assemble your family in the back yard at 6:00 am
and read the plans for day to you. Mill around for 15-20 minutes
and then have your father reassemble the family and tell you the
same thing again.
Morning Quarters:
Have your mother-in-law write down everything she's want done
the following day, then have you stand in the back yard at 6am
while she reads it to you.
Morning Quarters:
Stand outside at attention at dawn and have the poorest reader
you know read the morning paper out loud. Be sure to have him
skip over anything pertinent.
Passageways:
Place metal barriers on the lower 9" of every door in your house
so you bang your shins on them every time you to walk through
the doors, and add eight handles to each door that must each be
opened for the door to opened.
Qualifications:
Require your family to qualify to operate all the appliances in
your home, such as Qualified Dishwasher Operator, Qualified
Blender Technician, Qualified Toaster Operator, etc. Hold weekly
one-hour classes after working hours on enlightening topics,
such as "Dish Washing" or "Bed Making"
Red Lights:
After sundown, replace all light bulbs in the house with red
ones.
Reveille:
Give the keys to your house to a neighbor and have him enter
your bedroom every morning at 5:30 am, and blow a whistle, and
yell through a bullhorn, "Reveille, reveille, all hands heave
out and trice up. The smoking lamp is lit in all authorized
spaces."
Security Alert:
Enlist a team of paintball players to run through your dining
room shouting "Security Alert!" At hearing this, everyone should
drop to the floor or line up against the wall. For the best
effect, do it during meals.
Ship’s Bell:
Install a large bell on the front porch and whenever a relative
comes to visit, ring the bell 4 times and announce his
arrival/departure over a megaphone.
Ship’s Bell:
Remove all clocks in the house and ring a bell at intervals to
indicate the time.
Shipboard, Office:
Remove the contents of a walk-in closet and move three metal
desks into it. At the nearest Salvation Army Thrift Store,
salvage the oldest computer that you can find and set it on one
of the desks. Take two of your "closest" friends into the closet
and shut the door and try to write performance evaluations on
the rest of your family while they stand outside the door
yelling, "Hurry up."
Shipboard:
At an amusement park, fill your stomach with coffee and ride a
roller coaster non-stop.
Shipboard:
Buy a dumpster, chip the paint off down to bare metal, paint it
gray, and then live in it for six months while someone else keep
chipping and painting the outside of it.
Shipboard:
Clean your house until there's absolutely not a speck of dust
anywhere. Call on a stranger to inspect your house.
Shipboard:
Cut the ends out of two juice cans, place them over your ears to
distort the sound while watching TV.
Shipboard:
Empty all the garbage bins in your house and sweep your driveway
3 times a day, whether they need it or not.
Shipboard:
Have a neighbor needle gun (compressed air powered impact device
for paint chipping) the aluminum siding on your house after you
have gone to bed.
Shipboard:
Leave your lawnmower running in your living room for 24 hours a
day for the proper noise level.
Shipboard:
On the hottest most humid day of the year, close all the doors
and windows in the house, and remove all fans for preventive
maintenance and disassemble the air conditioner. On the coldest
day of the year, disable your heating system for maintenance.
All family members must wear sweaters, heavy coats, and gloves
indoors to keep ice from forming on body parts. If going
outdoors for any occasion everyone must appear uniform. If one
person does not have the proper coat and gloves for the uniform,
the person must go without.
Shipboard:
Paint your house gray (exterior) include windows except for
rooms you do not frequent, paint your car gray, paint your
driveway a different shade of gray.
Shipboard:
Pump 10 inches of nasty, crappy water into your basement, then
pump it out, clean up, and paint the basement "deck gray."
Shipboard:
Put lube oil in your humidifier instead of water and set it to
"high.”
Shipboard:
Put the youngest most inexperienced adult in charge, salute him,
call him sir, and laugh at him behind his back when he orders
you do stupid things.
Shipboard:
Remove all plants, pictures, and decorations. Paint everything
gray, white, or the shade of hospital smocks.
Shipboard:
Repaint the interior of your home every month, whether it needs
it or not.
Shipboard:
Repaint your entire house gray once a month.
Shipboard:
Replace all wood objects with metal ones and paint them light
gray.
Shipboard:
Run all of the piping and wires inside your house on the outside
of the walls.
Shipboard:
Spend $20,000 on a satellite system for your TV, but only watch
CNN and the Weather Channel.
Shipboard:
The day before the quarterly Physical Readiness Test (PRT) get
Yellow Fever and Typhoid shots. Hold a safety stand down
immediately following PRT on the importance of hygiene, physical
conditioning, and proper diet and nutrition and then hold a
picnic featuring hot dogs and hamburgers (rollers and sliders)
plus lots of greasy fries.
Shipboard:
When watching TV, turn it off every 3 to 5 minutes saying that
the satellite signal is lost.
Special Sea Detail
(when entering or leaving port) : Before leaving home and after
arriving at home, have the entire family put on their best
clothes and stand around the edge of the front porch at
attention for an hour.
Sweepers:
Three times a day, sweep the entire house, including porches,
decks, and driveways and empty trash cans in containers at the
curb.
UNREP (Underway Replenishment): Strings ropes from your roof to
your neighbor’s roof at 5:00 am, and then have all family
members assemble on the roof wearing lifejackets and hard hats.
Have then stand around until 8:00 am and then send everyone
inside telling them it will be 2 hours until they will be needed
and that they should eat breakfast. Wait until they just start
to eat, and call them back to the roof. Transfer the contents of
your neighbor's garage to your garage using the lines strung
from roof to roof.
UNREP, refueling at sea:
Before filling your car's gas tank hold a meeting six hours in
advance of the station's opening. Assemble medical personnel,
all your immediate relatives, safety observers and the fire
department ready with fire hoses three hours before the station
opens. Require everyone to line up on the sidewalk at parade
rest as the clerk opens the station. Send a fuel sample to a
testing lab before starting to fill up.
Watch
(low visibility): While driving in foggy weather, instruct your
children to turn around, look out the back window, and make
reports on anything they see.
Watch, Bridge:
Get your neighbor to phone you at 11:30 pm, dress in the dark,
hang binoculars around your neck, and stare at the backyard from
your patio. Identify the whereabouts of all bats, crickets,
moths, and stray dogs by sound and sight, keep a written record
of everything you see, and choke down at least one cup of
four-day old black coffee every thirty minutes. Anytime a
critter enters the yard, call your wife on the cell phone to
apprise her of its movements. On snowy or foggy nights, be sure
to blow an air horn at regular intervals to warn the neighbors
of your whereabouts.
Watch, Bridge:
Go to a local bridge and stare at the water for twelve straight
hours.
Watch, Quarterdeck:
In the middle of January, place a lectern at the end of your
driveway. Have you family stand watches at the lectern, rotating
at 4-hour intervals.
Watch, Quarterdeck:
Make all your children identify themselves every time they enter
or leave the house, ask for permission to enter or leave, and
then salute the flag on the back porch.
Watch, Sonar:
Disconnect your TV cable box and stare to the static for six
hours. Report every
15 minutes to no one in particular, "Sonar holds no contacts."
Watch:
Don your Sunday best and stand on your front porch for four
hours.
Watch:
In winter, invite all your neighbors to your house at midnight.
Stand on your front pouch in a light jacket, a thin white hat,
and a pair of thin gloves. Salute every person that arrives and
grant them "permission to come aboard.” Have your wife relieve
you at 4:00 am dressed in warm clothes. Spend next two hours
trying to warm up and get some sleep before the next day’s work.
Watch:
Stand by the phone from 12 A.M. to 4 A.M. with a logbook, fire
bell, and intrusion alarm panel within reach. Mount a gauge on
the wall to read your house's water pressure. Have your youngest
child walk around with a tape measure to see if your basement is
flooding. He/she must check it every hour and report back to you
that all conditions are normal. With each report, phone a
neighbor, and tell him all conditions are normal at your house
and report the water pressure.
Watch:
Walk around your car for four hours, check the tire pressure,
oil level, and fuel level every 15 minutes, and keep an accurate
log of the readings.
Work Schedule:
Periodically run your life on a "12 on, 12 off" routine. Work 12
hours at your normal day job and take care of your personal
matters during the next 4 hours before 8 hours of sleep. During
the next 12 hours off, have an 18 wheeler from a grocery
distributor pull up in front of your house, gather all your
neighbors, form a human chain from the truck down to your
basement, pass all of the contents of the truck hand-to-hand
down to the basement. Repeat the process the next 12 off shift,
but this time unload a truckload of high explosives.