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Razor Blades and Ivory Soap
by Bob "Dex" Armstrong
There was a point in time... All you
lads who rode submersible iron will recognize the point... A point where
you could tell exactly how long you had been out by the diameter of the
salt stain in the armpits of your last clean dungaree shirt. The point
where all of your fellow inmates smelled like the inside of Olga Korbut's
gym shorts.
At this point in the interest of human preservation and fear that his ship
was taking on the internal atmosphere of the monkey house at the Chicago
zoo... The Old Man would lift water restriction and allow 'white light' in
the berthing compartments.
Men, who had lived and interacted in the dim glow of night
vision-preserving red light, got a good look at each other for the first
time in weeks. It wasn't a pretty sight...
"Jeezus, have I been living with these animals?"
The after battery looked like a garbage dump. Shredded ration boxes, stray
socks... Magazines, loaded butt kits... Sour towels and a collection of
dirty laundry that had matured to the point it was turning into limburger
cheese.
It was a point far past the day we had wrapped ourselves around the last
of the potatoes stored in the showers. The only visual evidence of their
previous existence were the wadded up gunny sacks carpeting the deck of
the after battery head and whatever GDU-delivered peels the fish off Nova
Scotia were dining on... The 'Idaho's Best' rug in the sonar shack was the
residual product of some previous deployment.
For those of you who never rode Uncle Sam's underseas technological
treats, a smoke boat shower was an aluminum box the size of a coffin
designed for Mickey Rooney. It had a shower head that delivered semi-hot
water at the rate of five peeing humming birds and a shelf for soap that
could leave a very distinctive purple mark on your upper biceps if the
boat took a roll during occupancy... And a deck drain... A hole through
which amazing things could appear if anyone put a pressure in number two
sanitary tank without shutting the required gate valve and quick throw.
Even though you had to Crisco your ass to turn around in the damn thing,
it was the closest thing to heaven a diesel boat sailor came in contact
with at sea.
Everyone shucked his dungarees down to his skivvies... Grabbed a towel and
his 'douche bag' (subsailor for shaving kit) and got in line. While guys
rooted through sidelockers for their shower gear, towel fights broke
out... Not Cub Scout towel flipping, serious heavy-duty towel popping. The
kind that can take little chunks of hiney if you couldn't move and fend
off the shot. Grown men laughing and popping each other with towels...
Underseas recreation at its finest.
After a two-minute soapdown, scrub and a rinse, men would lather up and
scrape off weeks of beard accumulation. Lifers who never shelled out for
razor blades would say,
"Hey kid... How about seconds on that blade?"
Cheap bastards... Same guys that ran out of sea stores smokes after two
weeks... Same guys who would wander around Bells filling their glass from
any available pitcher. They are probably millionaires now and live by tax
loopholes.
Bottles of Vitalis, Lucky Tiger, Mennens, Old Spice, Aqua Velva, and God
knows what else, appeared from side lockers. In thirty minutes, the entire
boat smelled like the parlor of the best whorehouse in New Orleans.
Adrian Stukey would break into a Ray Charles song and do his aboriginal
dance... He employed footwork only known to Stukey and three Congolese
witch doctors. The man had moves Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly never thought
of... Sort of reminiscent of an electrocuted orangutan, mixed with the
mating dance of the Australian Dingo eaters.
By some miracle, clean white skivvy shirts appeared. Some with the names
of guys, who rode the boat five or six years previously, stenciled across
the back.
"Who in the hell is Garabaldi, D. L.?"
"How'n the hell do I know?"
"Musta been some boat sailor."
"Yeh, I guess... What's it to you... You writing a gahdam book?"
"Maybe someday... Who knows?"
Nah... Who'd give a damn about reading stuff about this jacked up bunch of
idiots? Who'd believe it? Once upon a time, I lived among people who
volunteered to live like primates in an iron septic tank with lousy air,
shared sleeping arrangements, had at least four leaks (air, oil, water,
and security), made weird sounds, and agitated like a warped washing
machine, for less money than you could fit into a gahdam gumball
machine... Who'd read crap like that?
When the Goddess of Personal Hygiene looked down and blessed the residents
of the roaming hotel SS-481... It was good.
It was also good to live among men who were right where they wanted to
be... Nobody chloroformed them and hauled them off to New London. Nobody
ever called their number at the Selective Service Board. They
volunteered... Every gahdam one. Most of the world didn't even know they
were there... Boats... Little primitive communities of the finest men I've
ever known that lived in metal containers and took them to sea. There has
to be a story in there somewhere.
The next time you see a Texaco tank truck rolling down the highway, just
for a moment visualize it a couple of hundred feet underwater... Then
picture thirty or forty happy-go-lucky half-naked men singing, doing silly
dancing and towel fighting inside... And willing to do whatever it took to
keep nasty folks with weird political agendas from crawling through your
bedroom window. Those lads were my shipmates.
Author's note: In the ensuing years, service under the sea has changed for
the better. Lads today are not known as 'pig boat sailors'. Today's modern
submersibles are more conducive to proper personal hygiene, grooming and
gentlemanly attire. After a hard day of fission monitoring, switch
flipping and gauge dickering, our present day subsurface bluejacket may
attend a lecture on molecular configuration of high-density hydrocarbons
emanating from the planet Mongo. He and soon to be, she, can opt for a
live concert... Polo... Fencing or a little commingling in a hot tub...
Mint Juleps followed by a shrimp cocktail precedes the evening meal after
which those not engaged in ship's work or on watch are free to attend a
visiting Broadway stage production or enjoy a Swedish massage in the crew
comfort compartment.
Before retiring, he or she fills out his or her 'What I like about Naval
Service' questionnaire which is handed to the first or second class
bedtime story petty officer... Then after a telling of the 'Three Bears
and the Call Girl' story, they say their 'God bless Hyman Rickover'
prayer, drink their hot cocoa and turn in to their Martha Stewart approved
poopy sacks to dream of super computers in accordance with current
prescribed force policy.
It's a helluva lot better these days.
Credits
Dex Armstrong's Razor Blades and Ivory Soap was first published in
Ray Stone's After
Battery Collection
and is reprinted with permission. Dex was a Torpedoman who served on
the Requin in the 1960s.
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