T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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69.1 | Cautious habits, not bad! | SUCCES::BURTON | | Fri Feb 06 1987 12:44 | 24 |
|
I started a law-enforcement course but had to stop because of the
demands of this job.
I do know what your talking about. I was told that if I or my partner
were to take a shotgun blast in the gut it would be our fault.
You have to be aware of potential danger long before it starts.
Usually from the first day of any law-enforcement it is instilled
in you to be aware, to be always on the gaurd. It's not paranoia,
it's just a way to never have to show up at your partners house
and tell his wife he won't be home...ever. Or have him have to face
your wife with the same news.
Because of my piercing blue eyes I was advised to donn sunglasses
whenever possible. Partly to avoid giving people the impression
you spoke of and partly to avoid intimidating people.
Going through the course opened my eyes to a lot of cop-like behaviour
that I didn't quite understand before. It also scared the sh*t out
of my wife when she started to realize the potential danger I could
be in.
I don't think it'd be very easy to change these habits once aquired
either.
I do know what you mean Bob.
Rob Burton
|
69.2 | | GENRAL::FRASHER | An opinion for any occasion | Tue Feb 10 1987 19:14 | 7 |
| I don't know if I qualify, I'm not a combat vet or a cop, but I
grew up with gang wars, small compared to big cities, 5 = gang in
Walsenburg, Colo., but I was always watching my back side so another
gang wouldn't come up behind me. Now, I try to keep my back to
a wall. Its not as intense, but it exists.
Spence
|
69.4 | | TOOTER::GARY | inclined to wear bedroom slippers... | Wed Feb 11 1987 14:52 | 11 |
| Well I do understand what you mean, at least partially. I study Karate, and
my teacher is ALWAYS stressing the development of peripheral vision. Mine
is lousy.
As to the other, I lived in NY for awhile in a none to safe neighborhood and
I developed a very fine sense of what was dangerous. (Empty subway cars,
elevators, dark streets, poorer areas often = dangerous areas, being to
obvious, ect.) I found that after I moved to (much) safer Mass. that I
relaxed very quickly. However when I visit the city the reflexes come back.
-vicki
|
69.5 | | MELODY::MCCLURE | Who Me??? | Thu Feb 12 1987 08:21 | 23 |
| Yes, reflexes (involuntary) borne of bad times.
I slammed a car door on a guy's thumb once. I notice where
peoples hands are in relation to the door now and I wince
involuntarily when I see a close call. even if the folks
concerned don't see it.
Combat reflexes are an interesting subject. Ther was a guy
in my Reserve Infantry unit that had quite a combat background.
Airborne, Ranger and Special Forces, among other little things
that don't get talked about much. One of tours in 'Nam was
with a LRP team. His first marriage ended because he was away
from home too much. On the night of his second marriage, he
laid down on the bed while his bride went in the bathroom to
change. When she emerged, he was asleep. She walked over to
him to shake him awake. By the time he realized where he was
and what was happening, he had her by the throat; up against
the wall and had hit her three times.
I never lean over someone and touch a shoulder to wake them.
Bob Mc
|
69.6 | Be careful waking people up | KELVIN::RPALMER | Half a bubble off plumb | Thu Feb 12 1987 09:16 | 10 |
| RE .5
I learned early as a kid *never* to wake my dad by touching
or shaking him. When woken up he jumps to his feet with fists
clenched. The most common method we used was to toss pillows at
him from a safe distance.
My dad was in the Strategic Air Command from '52-'56. I Don't
know what it did to him but he swears his wake up problem is a direct
result.
=Ralph=
|
69.7 | | GENRAL::FRASHER | An opinion for any occasion | Thu Feb 12 1987 11:46 | 28 |
| My wife works with a guy who spent time in Viet Nam and now, whenever
he smells blood, he goes totally berserk.
RE waking a person
If I can't arouse them by loud yelling, I grab a toe and shake it.
Never stand within reach of them. I like the pillow idea 8-).
Luckily, I don't have waking problems. When I start to snore, my
wife gently pushes on me until I roll over. Sometimes she has to
gently shake my shoulder to wake me and I awaken slowly, like I'm
coming out of a deep hole. The one time that I remember hitting her
was the result of a nightmare. She touched me and I clouted her
in the chin in an attempt to protect my face. I don't even remember
the dream. Another time, I dreamed that my pillow was covered with
spiders and her hair tickled my face. I damn near tore the closet
door down trying to get away. I am deathly afraid of spiders.
I had a friend who related a story of Thailand. One of his roomies
had purchased a stuffed cobra, came back late that night and set
the cobra on a table next to the bed. Another roomie, sleeping
on the bottom bunk, awoke during the night and spied the cobra,
in a striking position, and broke an arm and a leg trying to get
away from it. He didn't know it was stuffed.
My point:
You can never tell what's in the mind of a sleeping person. You
have to assume the worst when waking them. I'd rather dream of
spiders than being attacked by Charlie.
Spence
|
69.9 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | CSSE/Lang. & Tools, ZK02-1/N71, DTN 381-2525, WRU #338 | Thu Feb 12 1987 13:07 | 50 |
|
I have a military background and am aware that I take a lot of little
defensive steps: Like the write of the base note I like to sit with
my back to a wall, and have a view of the door (my managers get used
to the fact that my cube needs a redesign every time we move so I can
achieve this :-)
Like I always look out of my windows and check out my car before going
out to it. Like I never leave to or from work at quite the same time,
often change routes. I look the car over as I approch it, and check
if anybody has been inside it before climbing in (its a Jeep, so the
door doesn't lock). I also check the parking lot of my condo for suspicous
characters several times a night (one of the joys of the place is that
it is flood lit!)
However: an anecdote.
I attended DECUS at Dallas last year, and by mid-week felt in need of
some good Country music. So I left the hotel and got the taxi to take
me to a place I'd had recomended by the hotel. Place turned out to be
a dump, so I decided to walk back to town - it couldn't be far I figured,
as I could see the hotel on the sky line, and it was still about an
hour of sunset.
I was wrong folks - it was 8 miles - I got back after 8 by which time
it was dark and raining.
I told the hotel barman where I had walked from and he proceded to tell
me I must be mad - I had walked through the roughest part of Dallas,
where muggings were a nightly sport. Howver I "walked smart" - I was
aware of people in the shadows, I kept clear of walls and doorways,
I kept a constant vigilance (well I could claim I was looking for a
taxi, but after the first 15 minutes that wasn't true), I remained ready
to act, and I never needed to.
I saw some research material a while back that showed that muggers almost
intuitively pick victims who will be easy: perhaps the Dallas muggers
spotted that I wouldn't have been (I was armed with a walking cane,
this is often a sign of weakness, but it depends how you hold it.) I'm
also 180 lbs and a 5th Dan at the military flavor of Tae Kwon Do.
Also I should say somebody once did try to mug me - In London. I had
just taken money from an ATM machine, and this unsavoury character thought
I should donate it to his favorite charity. I broke his arm and jaw with
my walking cane - he was trying to put a knife between my ribs at the
time. But then taking money from a cash machine in a public place
definitely is not "walking samrt"!
/. Ian .\
|
69.10 | More on being awoken | STING::BARBER | | Thu Feb 12 1987 17:30 | 38 |
| Re. Wakeing people up
An old friend, who was with the Army Special Forces (Green Bennies)
got into a conversation about this subject. Seems that his group
got attached to a reg unit for a wile for what ever reason. Shortly
after they arrived ,one night, one of the regulars went into their
tent to wake one up for a guard watch. Unfortunly no one ever told
him about how to wake these guys and he grabbed the sleeping mans
sholder to wake him.
This pataculer person sleeped with his hand on a knife under his
pillow. The sleeping man came up and knifed the man as soon as he
shook him, and then became fully awake just afterwards, saw what
happened and began to admister first aid. The mess went to a court
marshal and the sleeping man was exhonerated on the basis that
a person was legaly not responable for his actions for the first
30 - 45 seconds after he is awoken.
As a side note one of the first things we learned in the Navy, was
never touch a sleeping person, if you must wake him, shake the base
of the bed (where his feet are) one or twice and then stand back
and call their name. This way you advoided the problem of being
in the way of someone charging out of the bed.
One other funny one was eather aseep or awake the one sound you were
dialed into on a combat ship was the general quarters alarm (the one
that went bong bong bong). My now ex wife when we were married went
out and bought this new fancy alarm clock. Well she set it for the
morning and of course the rascal goes off and sounds just like a
GQ alarm. I came out of the bed running and grabbing for my clothes
just like I was back on ship. Once I realised where I was I went
back over to the clock, picked it up and tossed it out the window.
Needless to say it upset my wife but then I told her you can get
one that buzzes or beeps or whatever, but I was determined never
to wake to that sound in my own house.
Bob B
|
69.12 | | XANADU::DM_JOHNSON | | Fri Feb 13 1987 09:05 | 11 |
| On a somewhat related topic:
Are any of you bothered by the helicoptors? These days the pilots
approach MK differently but the first few years mk was open they
used to come in from the north, low over the trees. I happened to
be out for a walk the first time I heard one come in right over
me. The adrenaline level went sky high when I heard the chop sound.
I'm a bit more adapted at this point but occaisionally it will still
bring the adrenaline rush.
Denny
|
69.13 | alleway,everday | BOBBY::REDDEN | More Ancient than Myth | Fri Feb 13 1987 09:13 | 24 |
| RE: < Note 69.5 >
> Combat reflexes are an interesting subject. Ther was a guy
> in my Reserve Infantry unit that had quite a combat background.
> Airborne, Ranger and Special Forces, among other little things
> that don't get talked about much. One of tours in 'Nam was
> with a LRP team. His first marriage ended because he was away
> from home too much. On the night of his second marriage, he
> laid down on the bed while his bride went in the bathroom to
> change. When she emerged, he was asleep. She walked over to
> him to shake him awake. By the time he realized where he was
> and what was happening, he had her by the throat; up against
> the wall and had hit her three times.
In the conference UCOUNT::VETERANS, there is a discussion about
why it is so easy for people to believe this sort of tale,
especially when presented on the news as part of the background
data on some psychotic. What kind of a society assumes that
it's practitioners of military arts and crafts are all like
Rambo? Does it seem fair to the former serious soldiers who
are now well-adjusted non-soldiers to sling such stereotypes
this casually?
|
69.14 | combat reflexes, never gone/hard to live with. | MANTIS::PARE | | Fri Feb 13 1987 09:41 | 20 |
| Can a woman add something here? A man who had many of these combat
habits stayed with us once. His brothers got creamed more
than once when waking him and so did his girlfriends.
He was a most gentle man when awake, very kind and generous,...
...unless you made him mad. It was difficult to get him to that
point but I saw it once. He HAD to react. He couldn't seem to
help it. He turned around and picked up the kitchen stove....I came in
the room and saw what was happening and yelled
"Mike, no..it's gas..it will blow up" ....
and he put the stove down, walked in the other room and
punched out a two inch thick safety glass window.
It was the scariest thing I ever saw. It scared the hell out of me.
All the time I was driving him to the emergency room I was shaking
and crying. I don't even know why I'm telling you about it except
that,...he really couldn't help it,..I really believe that,...and the
other thing is,...I never really stopped being afraid of him,...and I
guess I really couldn't help that either.
|
69.15 | I hope I don't smell smoke. | GENRAL::FRASHER | An opinion for any occasion | Fri Feb 13 1987 11:12 | 31 |
| RE .13
> What kind of a society assumes that
> it's practitioners of military arts and crafts are all like
> Rambo? Does it seem fair to the former serious soldiers who
> are now well-adjusted non-soldiers to sling such stereotypes
> this casually?
The vets who are well adjusted are not noticed. The ones with the
"Viet Nam Syndrome" ARE noticed. Like the newspaper, which sells
more papers, "Joe Blow dies in car wreck" or "Joe Blow safely drove
to Denver"? I don't think our society assumes that all vets are
Rambos, that would be a pretty narrow minded society. I don't think
of them as stereotypes, but interesting cases. I feel sorry for
combat vets because of what they went through, but I don't assume
that they are raving killers because of it. I know of many well
adjusted vets, but I can only think of one mild case of the "Syndrome".
He told me that he has to stay busy or the memories will drive him
nuts. I can well imagine. He's got a reputation as a chatterbox
and can't sit still for a minute.
But, you are right, it should be pointed out that these people are
definitely a minority. The majority of vets are coping very well.
I think (hope) that most people here would view this topic in interest
and maybe learning about an experience that many of us have never
been through. I would hope that no one would view it as stereotypical
of all vets. In fact, I am a Viet Nam vet, but I have never seen
combat. I have never seen Viet Nam, thank God. I am a Viet Nam
vet simply because I served during that time period.
Spence
|
69.16 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | CSSE/Lang. & Tools, ZK02-1/N71, DTN 381-2525, WRU #338 | Fri Feb 13 1987 11:21 | 33 |
|
There are really two separate things being talked about here:
The cat like caution, always taking precautions is simply the ingrained
trade craft of whatever service you were in - it never really goes away,
but it really does no harm in most cases. A little caution, even if
learned unpleasantly, can even save your life.
The second is the "fight reaction" the vet that goes into total combat
on being awakened, or pushed over the top. This is a known, recognizable,
and treatable psychological condition. It can be dangerous if not treated
because in extremis people suffering this way may kill someone (it does
occasionally happen). The man in the previous note who punched through
2" of glass could have delivered that punch against the nearest human
being - and that much power is a lethal blow in many parts of the body.
There is a well documented case from WWII of a British Commando who
after completing advanced training went home on a 48 hour pass. On the
first night he was resting in front of the fire, with a glass of beer
when his 7 year old daughter sneaked up behind him, covered his eyes
with her hands and said "guess who".
He killed her in pure react mode response. (A single blow delivered
as he turned, and before he had time to recognize his "attacker").
Such behaviour might be desirable in war time, but after service is
over it is anything but a survival trait. Or perhaps it merely shows
how little man has progressed from his animal ancestors, and the miltary
training causes a few people to regress to the state of wariness and
fight-readiness of their ancestors.
/. Ian .\
|
69.17 | | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Dennis (the Menace) Ahern 223-5882 | Fri Feb 13 1987 16:28 | 7 |
| RE: .15 "stateside vets"
I, too, served during that "era", but never got any closer than
California. I do NOT consider myself a "Viet Nam Vet".
|
69.18 | | MPGS::MCCLURE | Who Me??? | Mon Feb 16 1987 08:14 | 12 |
| re .13
Since I am the one that placed that account in here, you will
just have to take my word that the individual concerned told
me the tale as fact about himself. I DID NOT read it in a
newspaper! I had no reason not to believe the individual. We
had a sufficient amount of evidence concerning his background
to believe that his stories about his past (that he was willing
to tell 8-)), were accurate.
Bob_E8_mc
|
69.19 | I'm proud to be a vet. | GENRAL::FRASHER | An opinion for any occasion | Tue Feb 17 1987 12:06 | 27 |
| RE .17
> I, too, served during that "era", but never got any closer than
> California. I do NOT consider myself a "Viet Nam Vet".
But the government does. According to the government I am a "Viet
Nam Era Veteran". I served during that era. The main difference
is basically semantics.
Viet Nam Era Veteran vs Viet Nam Combat Veteran
The government doesn't make a distinction between the two, but it
is a difference that should be made clear. I'd rather be a veteran
than a Canadian defector, but I'm glad I'm not a combat veteran.
I can, if I wanted to, get benefits from the government because
I served during that era instead of hiding in Canada. I wouldn't
feel comfortable reaping those benefits knowing that the combat
vets need it a whole lot more than I do, at least the ones with
combat related disabilities, but, if I decide to continue college,
you can bet that I will use the benefits. I took my chances and
just got lucky. Had I waited for the lottery to pick me, I'd have
been in infantry in the Army. My number was 7. They had every
opportunity to send me to Nam, but they didn't. At least I wasn't
hiding someplace where they couldn't find me.
BTW, my lucky number is supposed to be 7. Ha, ha!!!
Spence
|
69.20 | Interesting. | RDGE00::SADAT | Jambo!! | Tue Feb 17 1987 12:50 | 25 |
| > I took my chances and
> just got lucky. Had I waited for the lottery to pick me, I'd have
> been in infantry in the Army. My number was 7. They had every
> opportunity to send me to Nam, but they didn't. At least I wasn't
> hiding someplace where they couldn't find me.
Spence, are you saying that they used to run a lottery to decide who was going
to be invited to the party in Vietnam, or what? I don't understand. How did it
all work then? Because you were a volunteer you didn't have to go, is that what
you mean?
Actually I was watching a programme on BBC2 last night which was a
'fly-on-the-wall' documentary following the progress of some boys and girls who
had joined the navy. It was very interesting. All that shouting and screaming
and endless polishing and discipline and stuff. It brought me round to thinking
that it would impossible for the government to try and conscript us these days.
I suppose they might be able to take a very narrow age band (eg 17-19) but that
would be about it. Even then can you imagine the likes of the Stretford End in
the army? The mind boggles! Anyway, I mean we've all got mortgages and
things these days...! "I'm sorry Mrs. Thatch. I can't come to the war this
week, as I'm behind on the local rates payments...". Hmmm.
What does anybody else think?
Tarik.
|
69.21 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | CSSE/Lang. & Tools, ZK02-1/N71, DTN 381-2525, WRU #338 | Tue Feb 17 1987 15:04 | 16 |
| Tarik: whilst "do they hold a lottery" is perhaps a little OTT, you have
to realise that in a modern armed force (army, navy or air force) there
is a very large "logistical tail" - for every front line fighter there are
10 or more support personnel.
As for who goes and who stays -- well in most armies the volunteers are
allowed to "make a bid" for the arm of the services they prefer. There is
no guarantee that they will get it of course, and military personnel
departments have a huge reputation for perversity. Equally however relatively
few people actually request "pbi" service - most people want to be drivers,
mechanics, electricians, or indeed any trade at all.
As for a mortgage being a valid excuse against conscription, well it wasn't
in WWI, and it wasn't in WWII, so why should it be now?
/. Ian .\
|
69.22 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Feb 17 1987 15:14 | 19 |
| Re: .20, .21
The lottery was real. It started in 1970, I think, and ended
in 1973. It was based on your birthdate - every day got a number
from 1 to 365 (or 366) for all males who turned 17 that year.
The lowest numbers got drafted first. If you had a very low number,
then you were sure to get picked when you turned 18.
My number was 26, but the next year they ended the draft, so I
"lucked out".
One interesting thing was that there was a ruckus the first year
about the uneven distribution of the numbers. They used
ping-pong balls with the dates marked in a big drum, but loaded them
in calendar sequence. Thus there was a higher probablility of
getting a low number if you were born later in the year. The
second year they fixed that problem.
Steve
|
69.23 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | CSSE/Lang. & Tools, ZK02-1/N71, DTN 381-2525, WRU #338 | Tue Feb 17 1987 15:49 | 7 |
|
Steve: I am aware that "selective service" was a lottery: however Tarik's
.20 and my .21 responded to a reference in .19 that the author "got lucky"
by not drawing a combat billet.
/. Ian .\
|
69.24 | memories | CGHUB::CONNELLY | Eye Dr3 - Regnad Kcin | Tue Feb 17 1987 23:57 | 14 |
| re: .22
i'm pretty sure the first lottery was in the fall of '69,
as i recall sitting around listening to it on the radio with Lee
(the fine fellow who was "loaning" me his couch to sleep on) and
Phil (the ex-husband of the woman who lived next door to us)
none of us drew very good numbers, but we all managed to stay
in school long enough to keep our 2S's (except for me in '72:
i went 1A for the year and didn't get called up due to the war
"winding down")
...for my part, nothing they do will ever "rehabilitate" Nixon
(but that's another story)
|
69.25 | ...no, I didn't go. | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Dennis (the Menace) Ahern 223-5882 | Wed Feb 18 1987 10:28 | 32 |
|
Back when I was graduating from High School ('62) it was the expected
thing that you would go into the service for four years. My three
older brothers had all gone and come back, 1 air force, 1 marine,
and one national guard. When my turn came, a buddy of mine and
I went down to the Navy recruiter one night after work and signed
up. Then I went home and told my folks.
After going through boot camp, my buddy and I split up. He went to
airplane mechanics school and I went to photographers school. As
a Photographer's Mate assigned to an amphibious command I spent
a lot of my time shooting landing operations and making training
films at Camp Pendleton. At that time the Navy was only sending
volunteers to Vietnam.
For a while, I considered volunteering because I was brought up
on a diet of John Wayne and "Victory at Sea". I wanted to take
pictures that would live forever in history books and magazines
and in people's minds as the images of war. One of the other
Photographer's Mates wanted to go, but his wife wouldn't hear of
it, and I realized that if I went I would never come back. There
were times on operations where I almost got killed or injured because
I would go out on a limb to get just the right angle. I got reprimands
for damaged equipment this way, but I got commendations for great
pictures.
So I never went, and I am a veteran of that "era", and I know that
Uncle Sam considers me a "Vietnam Vet", but I would never put myself
in the same league as those that did go, and bled real blood, and
shed real tears. My buddy went, and came back, but he's never been
the same. The pictures he brought back are in his head.
|
69.26 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | CSSE/Lang. & Tools, ZK02-1/N71, DTN 381-2525, WRU #338 | Wed Feb 18 1987 11:20 | 17 |
|
[Sort of an aside]
I went to see "Platoon" last week. Whilst standing in line waiting to
get in I got talking to a couple of 'vets. One was in a wheelchair.
We sat together and watched the movie. The guy in the wheelchair started
to cry about a third of the way through.
When it was over we went to a bar for a little memory suppresant.
Yes the images are in the mind for many people. Not all the images are
at all pleasant.
/. The Colonel .\
PS "Platoon" is a good movie.
|
69.27 | | PLDVAX::BUSHEE | George Bushee | Wed Feb 18 1987 12:36 | 13 |
|
RE: .26
I too saw Platoon, did bring back memories I had hoped to forget,
guess I never will tho...
As for bad habits, too many!! Like not letting myself get close
to anyone (good cause for divorce).
As to the ones who went to Canada, good for them! Maybe the next
time some politician and arms dealers figure on a war, wouldn't
it be nice if everyone said "You want it, you do it!"? Let's see
how many of them are willing to die.
|
69.28 | A few more thoughts | STING::BARBER | | Thu Feb 19 1987 14:56 | 18 |
| The thing about the base note is not that all the things I (or any
one else for that manner) are totally bad. There is a time and a
place for these "attributes" both in the service and in civilian life.
As Ian pointed out they can be VERY useful to keep yourself out
of trouble or at least be aware of its presence before it turns
into a problem.
It would appear that there are others that have picked up the same
or others little habits one way or another. Most are good in that
you become more aware of whats going on around you. Others are bad
in that you could be too reactionary out of reflexes, or (as in
the case I brought up in the base note) makes those around you
nervous. I was just curious if those of you out there were aware
that you had developed these habits and how they have affected
your life.
Bob B
|
69.29 | I'm back. | GENRAL::FRASHER | An opinion for any occasion | Mon Feb 23 1987 19:13 | 42 |
| I haven't backed out, just busy in other stuff.
I will try to explain some questions posed back around .20 and .21.
I graduated in '70 during the lottery time period. Being a pessimist,
I was worried that my number would come up low and I would be shipped
to Nam to be killed. So, I chickened out and joined the local National
Guard unit after a lot of persuasion from my father and a friend
of his who was in the Guard. A week after I graduated, I was sent
to boot camp in the Army. Well, my birthday is Sept. 30 and that
date was picked as #7 in the lottery. Luckily, I was already enlisted
as a field medic with a National Guard unit. When we graduated
from boot camp, the orders were called out like this:
Private Adams, infantry, Vietnam
Private Baker, infantry, Vietnam
Private Cook, infantry, Vietnam
Private Doyle, artillery, Vietnam
Private East, infantry, Vietnam
Private Frasher, weekend warrior, report to your unit.
etc.
Probably 80% of them went to Vietnam as infantry or artillery.
I feel lucky that I didn't have to go and I often wonder how many
made it back. After 2 years, I joined the Air Force and spent 10
years there. I spent 5 years at a site that monitors incoming aircraft
approaching the U.S. When we bumbled the attempt to save the hostages
in Iran, I wanted to go help. That made me madder than the whole
Vietnam war. But then, I was older by that time and it meant more
to me to be able to help fight for the cause. When I was 17, I
didn't want to risk dying for a war that I was completely ignorant
of. Sometimes I feel guilty for taking the easy way out while others
went to die in Vietnam, but I'm alive. And, to be perfectly honest,
I didn't have the guts to go to Canada.
It wasn't a matter of drawing lots or paying for a position, but
making the decision to slide under them before they could grab me.
Ironically, my brother-in-law wanted desperately to go to Vietnam
and his number was 365. He had to enlist in order to try to serve
and they wouldn't send him to Vietnam because of incapacitating
allergies. He was a cop and was murdered in his barracks in Texas.
Spence
|
69.31 | Makes you think, doesn't it...? | RDGE00::SADAT | Jambo!! | Tue Feb 24 1987 04:38 | 28 |
| An interesting aside on all this is the length of time the experience of combat
affects people for. It would appear that it is for ever. Two recent episodes on
TV brought this home to me in different ways.
The first was last year during the 1st July memorial service for the Battle of
the Somme (1st July 1916 was the worst day in the history of the British Army
with over 20,000 casualties). They had wheeled out some of the old boys over to
Belgium for the service and the TV stations interviewed them. I was shocked to
see how bitter, emotional and unforgiving these old fellows still are, even
though it's 70 years later.
Another was Sunday's repeat of 'The World At War' on Channel 4 which chronicled
the bombing of Germany by the British and American Air Forces in the Second
World War. This reminded me of when I was a student and I used to work in a
garage in the holidays cleaning and dewaxing new cars. There was a bloke there
who used to work there for a bit of extra cash who had been a tail-gunner on a
Lancaster during the war (apparently 3 out of 4 of them used to get killed and
they only had a life expectancy of 5 missions). He was a complete nervous
wreck. One day we were all sitting down rather tactlessly talking about a war
film we had just seen, when he practically had a nervous breakdown there and
then and was off work for two weeks. And this was more than thirty years later.
Disturbing. What was even more disturbing was that his real day-time job was
driving these huge petrol tanker lorries around delivering petrol to service
stations!!
Seems to me that there are no victors only victims.
Tarik.
|
69.32 | Your never quite the same | STING::BARBER | | Tue Feb 24 1987 10:28 | 41 |
| RE .30 Ive gone out with women as much as ten years my junior.
Most, when they find out that Iam a vet respect the fact that
I would prefer to relate the good things that happened to me
wile I was in the Navy. There are some though, that have what
I refer to as a "morbid curiosity" about the grimmer experiences.
For the most part they tend to be the younger women, and they will
push to find out what happened. The thing that always gets me is
how horrified they get when you tell them what is was like.
Most will give the excuse that they want to know because it will
help them understand. Ive yet to meet one that after you tell them
a few instances that dont react along the lines of "how could you
do that !!!". Its like the line from the Huey Lewis song "walking
a thin line" , "Your never the same once you've been under fire".
I dont think that any language has the ability to relate the feelings
and trauma that one experiences during and after a combat situation.
Its just an impossibility to relate that to someone that hasent gone
through it.
RE .31 I can relate to the guy you knew in the gas station. I,
along with many others have been restoring and flying a number
of WW II airplanes. Wile on tour to different airshows this summer
I met quite a few WW II vets that were aircrew on the B 17 and
B 25 aircraft we've had at the shows. You can always tell the guy
that went through the heavy duty stuff, because they all do the
same thing. As they go through the aircraft they go directly to
one of the crew stations, sit for a wile,just kind of get this stare,
touch things, occasional cry, and then come up to talk to you.
Every one of them has thanked me and the crew for going through
the trouble of preserving a part of history that none of them thought
they would ever see again.
You talk about age affecting the memories of these experiences, it
docent. Many can relate their experiences as if it happened yesterday.
As an example, one that was a pilot on B 17s asked to sit in the
pilots seat. Now mind you this guy hasent seen one of these aircraft
in forty something years. He closed his eyes and went through the
per flight check list from memory. The list is THREE PAGES LONG
and he went through it flawlessly.
Bob B
|
69.33 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | Ian F. ('The Colonel') Philpott | Wed Feb 25 1987 18:35 | 30 |
|
re bitterness after the Somme.
I may be able to shed a tad of light on the longevity of this emotion.
The Somme was the first major battle in which the "pals" battalions
were commited. This was Kitchener's great idea: rather than have
conscription he devised plans to encourage groups of friends to enlist,
and promised they could serve together. Often the entire eligible
population of a village or a factory would enlist en masse.
I lived in a village of one of the Lancashire Pals Battalions. It went
over the top in the first wave of the Somme. 92% of the men of military
age (16 to 28) in the village died in that first hour of fighting. The
battalion was a wreck and never served in action again, being relegated
to training depot in England. After the war they picked up their lives
again but the village was smashed - the mines closed because they didn't
have manpower, and the place suffered in the Great Depression. Needless
to say the few that are still alive (there were 12 at the last Armistice
Day parade I attended) are bitter. And yes, they dutifully place 574
crosses, each with a poppy and a soldiers name, in front of the war
memorial.
Remember the motto of the Armistice Ceremonies is "lest we forget".
The pals battalions were a disaster, but everyone, man woman and child,
who lived in that village during WWI and the depression can tell you
what war means...
/. Ian .\
|
69.34 | "Lions led by donkeys" as the Germans said... | RDGE28::SADAT | Jambo!! | Thu Feb 26 1987 08:11 | 0 |
69.35 | "just being S a f e" | TIPTOP::CSSST10 | the USS Midway is not Nuclear powered | Sat Jun 24 1989 15:25 | 25 |
|
Better late than never ... I guess
I was in the Corps for several years.
I'll still hit the ground on occasion if something even
remindes me of a cannon (car tail-pipe)
People laugh I know. I finally can too!
My older brother was in the Corps as well, and he'll try to
catch me off guard at the most inapproproiate time ...like
Thanksgiving day. He walked in and yelled " I N C O M I N G "
I thought I was going to have a heart attack.
I look under the car, in the car, around the car.
I even check out my apartment before I go in.
And I'll NEVER, EVER pick up anything off the ground if it
didn't belong to me.
Well, this doesn't qualify me as paranoid...far from it folks!!!
I still put on my socks before my trousers, that can't be any more
or less considered a Bad Habit...at least to me its not.
- Christopher
|
69.36 | | EGYPT::CRITZ | Greg Lemond wins 2nd Tour de France | Tue Aug 15 1989 13:25 | 19 |
| RE: 69.35
I was also in the Corps a couple of years. During my
tour in Vietnam, we had to return to the Phillipines
to get equipment repaired/replaced. A bunch of us had
to drive some jeeps from the ship to another part
of the base. Unknown to us, there was a skeet range
across the street from where we were leaving. As we
drove away, some skeet shooters started shooting.
You wouldn't believe the number of jeeps driving off
the road and onto the grass, and people jumping out of
(and under) the jeeps.
After I returned from Vietname (July 1968), Mom would
come out of the bedroom at 2 or 3 AM to find me sitting
in a chair in the dark. I explained that I was used to
sleeping about 3 or 4 hours a night, and that was it.
Scott
|