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A
couple of years ago someone asked me if I still thought about
Vietnam. I nearly laughed in their face. How do you stop thinking
about it? Every day for the last twenty-four years, I wake up with
it, and go to bed with it. But this is what I said. "Yea, I think
about it. I can't quit thinking about it. I never will. But, I've
also learned to live with it. I'm comfortable with the memories.
I've learned to stop trying to forget and learned instead to embrace
it. It just doesn't scare me anymore."
A psychologist once told me that NOT being affected by the
experience over there would be abnormal. When he told me that, it
was like he'd just given me a pardon. It was as if he said, "Go
ahead and feel something about the place, Bob. It ain't going
nowhere. You're gonna wear it for the rest of your life. Might as
well get to know it."
A lot of my "brothers" haven't been so lucky. For them the memories
are too painful, their sense of loss too great. My sister told me of
a friend she has whose husband was in the Nam. She asks this guy
when he was there. Here's what he said, "Just last night." It took
my sister a while to figure out what he was talking about. JUST LAST
NIGHT. Yeah I was in the Nam. When? JUST LAST NIGHT. During sex with
my wife. And on my way to work this morning. Over my lunch hour.
Yeah, I was there.
My sister says I'm not the same brother that went to Vietnam. My
wife says I won't let people get close to me, not even her. They are
probably both right.
Ask a vet about making friends in Nam. It was risky. Why? Because we
were in the business of death, and death was with us all the time.
It wasn't the death of, "If I die before I wake." This was the real
thing. The kind where boys scream for their mothers. The kind that
lingers in your mind and becomes more real each time you cheat it.
You don't want to make a lot of friends when the possibility of
dying is that real, that close. When you do, friends become a
liability.
A guy named Bob Flanigan was my friend. Bob Flanigan is dead. I put
him in a body bag one sunny day, April 29, 1969. We'd been talking,
only a few minutes before he was shot, about what we were going to
do when we got back in the world. Now, this was a guy who had come
in country the same time as myself. A guy who was loveable and
generous. He had blue eyes and sandy blond hair.
When he talked, it was with a soft drawl. Flanigan was a hick and he
knew it. That was part of his charm. He didn't care. Man, I loved
this guy like the brother I never had. But, I screwed up. I got too
close to him. Maybe I didn't know any better. But I broke one of the
unwritten rules of war.
DON'T GET CLOSE TO PEOPLE WHO ARE GOING TO DIE. Sometimes you can't
help it.
You hear vets use the term "buddy" when they refer to a guy they
spent the war with. "Me and this buddy a mine . . "
"Friend" sounds too intimate, doesn't it. "Friend" calls up images
of being close. If he's a friend, then you are going to be hurt if
he dies, and war hurts enough without adding to the pain. Get close;
get hurt. It's as simple as that.
In war you learn to keep people at that distance my wife talks
about. You become so good at it, that twenty years after the war,
you still do it without thinking. You won't allow yourself to be
vulnerable again.
My wife knows two people who can get into the soft spots inside me.
My daughters. I know it probably bothers her that they can do this.
It's not that I don't love my wife, I do. She's put up with a lot
from me. She'll tell you that when she signed on for better or worse
she had no idea there was going to be so much of the latter. But
with my daughters it's different.
My girls are mine. They'll always be my kids. Not marriage, not
distance, not even death can change that. They are something on this
earth that can never be taken away from me. I belong to them.
Nothing can change that.
I can have an ex-wife; but my girls can never have an ex-father.
There's the difference.
I can still see the faces, though they all seem to have the same
eyes. When I think of us I always see a line of "dirty grunts"
sitting on a paddy dike. We're caught in the first gray silver
between darkness and light. That first moment when we know we've
survived another night, and the business of staying alive for one
more day is about to begin. There was so much hope in that brief
space of time. It's what we used to pray for. "One more day, God.
One more day."
And I can hear our conversations as if they'd only just been spoken.
I still hear the way we sounded, the hard cynical jokes, our morbid
senses of humor. We were scared to death of dying, and trying our
best not to show it.
I recall the smells, too. Like the way cordite hangs on the air
after a fire-fight. Or the pungent odor of rice paddy mud. So
different from the black dirt of Iowa. The mud of Nam smells
ancient, somehow. Like it's always been there. And I'll never forget
the way blood smells, stick and drying on my hands. I spent a long
night that way once. That memory isn't going anywhere.
I remember how the night jungle appears almost dream like as the
pilot of a Cessna buzzes overhead, dropping parachute flares until
morning. That artificial sun would flicker and make shadows run
through the jungle. It was worse than not being able to see what was
out there sometimes. I remember once looking at the man next to me
as a flare floated overhead. The shadows around his eyes were so
deep that it looked like his eyes were gone. I reached over and
touched him on the arm; without looking at me he touched my hand. "I
know man. I know." That's what he said. It was a human moment. Two
guys a long way from home and scared sh"tless.
"I know man." And at that moment he did.
God I loved those guys. I hurt every time one of them died. We all
did. Despite our posturing. Despite our desire to stay disconnected,
we couldn't help ourselves. I know why Tim O'Brien writes his
stories. I know what gives Bruce Weigle the words to create poems so
honest I cry at their horrible beauty. It's love. Love for those
guys we shared the experience with.
We did our jobs like good soldiers, and we tried our best not to
become as hard as our surroundings. We touched each other and said,
"I know." Like a mother holding a child in the middle of a
nightmare, "It's going to be all right." We tried not to lose touch
with our humanity. We tried to walk that line. To be the good boys
our parents had raised and not to give into that unnamed thing we
knew was inside us all.
You want to know what frightening is? It's a nineteen-year-old-boy
who's had a sip of that power over life and death that war gives
you. It's a boy who, despite all the things he's been taught, knows
that he likes it. It's a nineteen-year-old who's just lost a friend,
and is angry and scared and, determined that, "Some *@#*s gonna
pay." To this day, the thought of that boy can wake me from a sound
sleep and leave me staring at the ceiling.
As I write this, I have a picture in from of me. It's of two young
men. On their laps are tablets. One is smoking a cigarette. Both
stare without expression at the camera. They're writing letters.
Staying in touch with places they would rather be. Places and people
they hope to see again.
The picture shares space in a frame with one of my wife. She doesn't
mind. She knows she's been included in special company. She knows
I'll always love those guys who shared that part of my life, a part
she never can. And she understands how I feel about the ones I know
are out there yet. The ones who still answer the question, "When
were you in Vietnam?"
"Hey, man. I was there just last night."
By Robert Clark
"The High Ground"
P.O. Box 457
Neillsville, WI 54456
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