A
Man’s War Never Ends
by
James Glaser
by James Glaser
Now
a days you could say the same about a woman’s war. All these years
later, you would think I would be able to store the war in the back
of my head, and I do try to do that, but on some days it marches
to the front, and nothing I have been able to learn to do will get
it back to a safe place.
I
don’t know what triggers it; maybe it is the way the sun was today
or some song I heard on the radio. Heck, maybe it is always out
front and I am able to keep busy enough to cover those thoughts
with daily routines.
I
know I’m not the only one thinking about Vietnam tonight here in
Minnesota. This week three men from here were killed in Iraq. There
was Staff Sergeant David Day, 1st Lt. Jason Timmerman, and Sergeant
Jesse Lhotka. All were National Guardsmen with the 151st Field Artillery.
When
people get killed in a war and you hear about it, all those people
you knew who were killed in your war come rushing to the front of
your thoughts, almost like they're saying, "don’t you forget
about me." You never can forget about them. War becomes a life
sentence, and you are forced to relive parts of it until the day
you die.
I
guess I could have gone over to someone’s house and talked to get
my mind off the subject, but it would all be back when I got home.
It is almost like the war wants its time with you and if you give
it to it, it will let you alone, for a little while.
I
have watched as people tried to drink it away with alcohol or even
tried to shoot it down with smack. Most of them learned that dying
was an easier way to get away from it. The booze and the heroin
were a shield to hide behind, but after a while, it would creep
right in no matter how wasted they got.
Those
people in Washington who send us off to war have no idea of what
they are inflicting on us. They always give away those pretty medals
with their colorful ribbons and think those medals will somehow
make your time in combat seem worthwhile. Some of my medals are
on this little shelf above my head as I write. I have never worn
them in public; I have never worn them in private either. I don’t
know why I keep them.
March
1, 2005
Jim
Glaser [send him mail],
a Marine Corps Vietnam War veteran and Commander of VFW Post 3869,
works to educate the American public on the consequences of war.
His personal website is James-Glaser.com.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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