Friday, February 18, 2011

Greetings from Virginia!

Hey everybody,

I apologize for not posting the past few months. Updating this site has been on the back of my mind for a couple weeks and now I'm finally taking the time to update it.

Continuing from my last post, I ended up spending Christmas in Virginia, far away from my family back in California. Myself, along with a few friends from guard duty, got "adopted" by a civilian family off-base. Anyway, we had Christmas dinner with them and had a great time.


For New Year's, I was very fortunate to go home for a couple days. The $800 ticket round-trip was well worth it! My family held off on celebrating their Christmas until New Year's, so really it was like I didn't miss anything!

As far as the School of Music goes, I'm about a month and a half into the program. I absolutely LOVE it here. Our days are pretty long due to the number of classes we have, but being so busy definitely makes the days go by very fast. Everyday I participate in concert band, ceremonial band, jazz band, ear training, music theory, and marching band. We exercise quite often. Many nights I have to go back to the school to complete my minimum 2 hours of daily individual practice time, but lately I've been pretty lucky and have had the evenings off.

A neat thing about this base -- and the school -- is that the Navy and Army is stationed here, too. It is great being able to talk to people from other branches of service, and hearing their stories. (Oh, and seeing different uniforms definitely breaks up the monotony of seeing the same uniform everyday.)

The Counter-March -- We are learning how to do this move in marching band

I almost forgot to mention...I got promoted to Lance Corporal! I'm very stoked. I earned the rank on February 1st, after completing more than 6 months of active duty service. For band members, promotion to the first couple ranks are automatic (promotion to PFC after graduating boot camp, and LCpl after 6 months). However, not every musician who went to boot camp when I did got promoted. There are more than a few that are still PFCs. The reason? Those Marines either got Page 11 entries for underage drinking (without incident), or Non-Judicial Punishment for being late to school one too many times (we call this going UA, or Unauthorized Absence...same thing as AWOL). Being promoted has much more prestige knowing that not everyone made the cut. It has to be earned.


Well, that is about all I have to say for now. Being President's Day weekend, we are on what is called a 72-hour liberty, or 3-day weekend. I haven't eaten dinner yet, so I'm going to go for a walk and stop by Subway. 

Thanks for reading! As usual, if you have any questions, feel free to post a response! Or, let me know what you think about my blog! 

Until next time, 

LCpl Rice


7 comments:

  1. Very awesome! Thank you for updating. I check your blog every single day and was very pleased to see a new update! Congratulations on making LCpl. Hope you keep on enjoying your young Marine Corps career journey. Take care.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you! May I ask how you came across my blog?

    ReplyDelete
  3. (I am iron07maiden who commented on your last blog by the way...)

    I found your blog through "Future of the Corps," a blog written by a female Marine who just graduated this month! She posted a link to your blog on hers and I started reading just after you graduated boot camp.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hello! I found your blog through the Future Jarheads website. I have a few questions about becoming a Marine Corps musician (I'm a pianist) and wondered if I should post the questions here or if you have an e-mail address that I could send them to. Thanks again for the great blog!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Where you at Jarhead? Keep us posted on your progress. OOH RAH!

    ReplyDelete
  6. do you still practice shooting while at the music school?

    ReplyDelete
  7. If you have any questions, feel free to e-mail me at Joshjames007@msn.com!

    No, we do not practice shooting while at the school. We do, however, work on physical fitness everyday, as well as combat readiness through working on different elements of the combat fitness test.

    ReplyDelete