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10:30AM Central Afghan Time

We have less than a month remaining in our Afghanistan deployment, but things are not going well. The problem isn’t ours — as in, we not only aren’t the source of the problem, we also aren’t the ones who will be affected by it — but with our replacements. When I saw the schedule for their arrival, compared with that for our departure, I believed we would have almost a month to do an organized handover, show them how we’d been doing things, put them in touch with the people who handle different aspects of operations here, work alongside them for a few weeks while they became accustomed to the procedures …

Nope. They’ve been in BAF for three days now, and it appears that it will be another four before any of them make it here to KAF. Meanwhile, the schedules for air transport over here are so volatile that we have to get our own teams back here at the earliest opportunity, in order to be sure they’ll be on hand for travel to BAF by the time we have to be there for customs inspection. We’re drawing ever closer to a “high-five” handoff, wherein we (outgoing) wave to our replacements (incoming) as we pass in opposite directions.

This isn’t the way it should be done. It isn’t the way we planned doing it. And we won’t be the ones living with the consequences. Why in the world did those people wait until they arrived in Afghanistan to start deciding which teams they would send to which locations?

Meanwhile, I’ve spent the last ten days intending (and expecting) to begin my next story any moment now. I have a bit over three weeks to meet my self-appointed goal of nine stories during this deployment, which should be more than enough, if I ever get started. Just one of those things.

I haven’t made or attempted to make reservations for WriterCon II; somehow it just doesn’t seem like a good idea while I’m still on a different continent. The moment I clear Fort Bragg, though — and I might do it as soon as I hit the States — I’m jumping on the program. With the advantage of LJ activity and interaction, I’ll know a few more people than I did at the first one, and I’m happily anticipating the opportunity to talk and party with like minds.

On my return from Iraq, I wrote only one story over the course of an entire year. (It wasn’t a really big story, either; it took me two days.) I have some ideas I’m wanting to tackle — including one which is long overdue — so I believe I can do better than last time out. I’ll have other things also to do, and I actually pushed myself harder here than I should have (given my duties, six stories over a year’s time should have been sufficient), but I still believe I can manage three or four stories in a year. That seems not only achievable but respectable.

Once I do begin the story currently in planning, it will be #30 for me. (Drabbles don’t count; they’re fun, but I don’t take them seriously.) Which will mean, in turn, that almost a third of my total output will have been produced in the past year.

I can live with that.