Sasebo

In the headlines

Navy Times all over Kitty Hawk like a cheap Hong Kong suit

Other than the whole Hong Kong rejection deal, the Navy Times has had Kitty Hawk in the news twice on morale issues. First was some sort of movie ban. The second is an article on individual liberty plans (ILPs), which according to local rumor here in Sasebo have been the trend in Yokosuka for quite a while now. IT2 “Jim” has more detail in multiple posts.

Sasebo shooting suspect kills himself

The big news Friday night for personnel on duty was the very real possibility that they’d be stuck on base for the weekend while Sasebo police try to find a Japanese man who came into a sports club (gym) with a shotgun and started shooting at people. Two dead, six injured. He killed himself outside a Catholic church. One article which I can’t find right now speculated that organized crime was creeping into Sasebo from Fukuoka, but this looks like an isolated case of psychological illness.

Naval Academy ex-Chaplain gets 12 years confinement (10 suspended) in plea agreement

I couldn’t find much detail on the sentence, but perhaps I could get the record of trial on this one and find out. Nonetheless, the LA Times seemed to have the most detail available, including a remark where his defense counsel says he’ll probably serve 18 months. One assumes that the journalists completely skipped over the term “dismissal.” Newsweek, meanwhile, commits the cardinal sin of calling a midshipman, “cadet.”

Sasebo
alcohol
morale
policy
sex et cetera
the church

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About that landlord thing…

Remember that house where the landlord lives under the tenants? I just was able to return to the housing office, and it happens to be available after all this time. And this time, I listened and didn’t end up trusting myself over God.

Sasebo

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Trying not to hide

Trying not to hide

Every U.S. servicemember in Sasebo who is eligible to live out in town knows about the cho board. It’s basically a board of pamphlets, each pamphlet containing information about a residence that’s available for the taking. Thus begins another story of me not listening to God.

What do I want in an apartment? Good size? A good stove? Nice view? Opportunities to share the Gospel? Wait, hold on to that last one, I’ll get back to it.

One of the available places had the landlord living on the first floor and the tenants live on the second in their own separate apartments. For a short moment, I thought it might be a witnessing opportunity. Imagine having such close dealings with a Japanese family and being able to share the Gospel. I could just give them my Japanese bible if I had to.

Suddenly my “rational” mind kicked in. Why would you want to live just above your landlord; are you crazy? They’ll be mean. They’ll make you turn your music off. You’ll go crazy.

I bypassed the place and set up appointments to look at a couple of others, the latter of which I decided to rent. It was a modest 7th floor apartment right next to the shopping district, which meant that I wouldn’t need a car as I was planning. The paperwork appointment was scheduled for the week after next. I was a little uneasy with that timing, and in that respect I was right. The Friday before the appointment, I got the news that I would have to hit up a school elsewhere in Japan instead. Infuriated that my plan didn’t happen the way I wanted it to, I cancelled the appointment.

During that school though I was given the opportunity to return to The Lighthouse, a Christian hospitality house for U.S. servicemembers. My visit there two years ago had convinced me to get an assignment in Japan, and I had been feeling homesick for a while. God’s plan was working in spite of my rigid resistance.

I still don’t have a place in town, but neither do my junior subordinates. They’re not allowed. Some of them stopped me when I was out in town the other night and asked. To complain at all about not having a place in God’s presence is akin to complaining right in front of them. Meanwhile, once I do get a place, if at all, I’m still going to ask God what He wants to do with it. That is, if I don’t end up getting carried away trusting myself again.

Sasebo

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