The Things They Carried

by DakotaRed 4 Replies latest jw friends

  • DakotaRed
    DakotaRed

    With Memorial Day once again upon us and knowing the JWs distain for those who have fought for their freedoms, I am posting this. I received it in my email today from a veterans Group I belong to.

    To all Veterans of any conflict and any country, I say, WELL DONE! Welcome home.

    The Things They Carried....

    They carried P-38 can openers and heat tabs, watches and dog tags, insect repellent, gum, cigarettes, Zippo lighters, salt tablets, compress bandages, ponchos, Kool- Aid, two or three canteens of water, iodine tablets, sterno, LRRP- rations, and C-rations stuffed in socks.

    They carried standard fatigues, jungle fatigues, jungle boots, bush hats, flak jackets and steel pots.

    They carried the M-16 trip flares and Claymore mines, M- 60 machine guns, the M-79 grenade launcher, M-14's, CAR- 15's, Stoners, Swedish K's, 66mm LAWS, shotguns, .45 caliber pistols, silencers, the sound of bullets, rockets, and choppers, and sometimes the sound of silence.

    They carried C-4 plastic explosives, an assortment of hand grenades, PRC-25 radios with 25 foot whip antennas and their heavy batteries, knives and machetes. Some carried napalm, CBU's and large bombs; some risked their lives to rescue others. Some escaped the fear, but dealt with the death and damage. Some made very hard decisions, and some just tried to survive.

    They carried malaria, dysentery, ringworms and leaches.

    They carried the land itself as it hardened on their boots.

    They carried stationery, pencils, and pictures of their loved ones - real and imagined.

    They carried love for people in the real world and love for one another. And sometimes they disguised that love: "Don't mean nothin'!"

    They carried memories for the most part, they carried themselves with poise and a kind of dignity. Now and then, there were times when panic set in, and people squealed or wanted to, but couldn't; when they twitched and made moaning sounds and covered their heads and said "Dear God" and hugged the earth and fired their weapons blindly and cringed and begged for the noise to stop and went wild and made stupid promises to themselves and God and their parents, hoping not to die.

    They carried the traditions of the United States military, and memories and images of those who served before them.

    They carried grief, terror, longing and their reputations.

    They carried the soldier's greatest fear: the embarrassment of dishonor.

    They crawled into tunnels, walked point, and advanced under fire, so as not to die of embarrassment.

    They were afraid of dying, but too afraid to show it.

    They carried the emotional baggage of men and women who might die at any moment.

    They carried the weight of the world.

    And they carried each other.

    Author Unknown

  • peaceloveharmony
    peaceloveharmony

    (((dakota red)))

    The Things They Carried is such a GREAT book! i wrote my senior paper on it! crazy eh? the author is Tim O'Brien.

  • AuntieJane
    AuntieJane

    LOVE those VETS! My dad, inlaws (both he and she) were WWII vets and I wish now I'd asked them more. Went to a 4th of July picnic last yr and the Air Force band played...great stuff! At the end they played the theme song for each division of the military and had those veterans stand...it was so moving, I still get goose bumps seeing those people standing proud--from old WWII vets to Korean to VietNam to Desert Storm.
    THANKS for sharing. We need to never forget.

  • SixofNine
    SixofNine

    Tim O'brien is a great writer! I can read very few fiction authors without feeling like I am being sold a well-used car by a imaginitave salesperson, but Tim O'brien is an exception. Perhaps because, being a vet, there is alot of fact in his fiction.

    Really sad that this is floating around uncredited. Obviously started when some GI read it and thought, "gee, if Polly thinks I wrote this, I'm sure to get laid".

  • DakotaRed
    DakotaRed

    Thanks for sharing the author. Another Veteran friend of mine emailed us all as to who the author actually was and I have ammended it to give him proper credit.

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