Today’s comic is in black and white. Why? Because devoting time to coloring two strips was seriously eating into my family time. I had never worked in color before BOHICA Blues– ever. I originally wanted to produce 3 strips a week, on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, but limited myself to just 2 because working with color was new to me.
Turns out that was a good choice, because doing all sorts of little details in color turns out to be hard. So I offered a compromise: do 3 strips instead of 2, but Monday and Wednesday would be in black & white, with the Friday “weekend edition” in color. So there would actually be more BOHICA Blues, just not all in color. It’s better than my other alternative, which is to do one strip a week in color. At the time I turned out black & white in better detail, and when I did the strip in Iraq, it was in black & white. So in a way I was getting back to the comic’s real roots.
That said, my black & white experiment only lasted about 10 strips or so. It will go back to full-color soon.
Meanwhile, this one is slightly political, or perhaps philosophical.
When we train with MILES gear, we’re playing laser tag. Your laser emitter will hit a sensor on someone’s harness, and they will get a shriek that goes off from a speaker next to their ear. The only way to switch it off is to take a key from your weapon laser and insert it in the harness. It deactivates the weapon and shuts off the howl.
And we enjoy the game. It is played for bragging rights, or maybe a beer sometimes. But then one day, at Mobilization Station, it really dawned that we’re getting ready for the possibility of the real deal. It won’t be a game being played for bragging rights; the next time we do this we won’t just trip a laser and give someone an annoying, ear-splitting beep from their sensor harness.
It’s one of those moments when you can feel the ground shift beneath your feet just a little.
What's it like to be in the Army for real, and get deployed to a place like the Iraq War? In BOHICA Blues, I turn my actual experiences into a slice of absurdist humor and walk you through this period of history from one person's perspective.
Using the classic TV show "M*A*S*H" as a guide, I created BOHICA Blues in 2013 to tell the story of what a deployment was like, with the absurdities of military life and war for all to see. It starts with the initial mobilization news, and goes on from there. BOHICA Blues isn't as "salty" as a lot of veteran humor; it doesn't have F-bombs, gore, or nudity: it could hypothetically appear on regular broadcast television.
Hopefully you can enjoy this and invite others to see what the Iraq War was like from someone who went there and is willing to share the experience with a laugh.
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