"I did not wear the uniform of the United States Army to protect people who agree with me. I wore it to defend people who do not." Walter J. Carney, 1930-2005
Tuesday, November 11, 2014
Thursday, October 9, 2014
Craig Badiali and Joan Fox
Craig Badiali and Joan Fox.
45 years ago this month, Craig and Joan committed suicide to protest hatred and war as they absorbed it in their short lives during the Vietnam War era.
I read a book about their joint suicides carried out in a field a few miles from and anti-war rally in Glassboro, New Jersey. The book, Craig and Joan, was briefly popular in young adult markets in the early 70’s. Since that time I have not heard anyone discuss their story or mention their names.
I wanted to mentioned them in this anniversary year. They pumped exhaust into a car to die from carbon monoxide poisoning, believing that they could steer the world to end war.
Craig Badiali and Joan Fox.
Scrolling down the page in this link produces a very brief story about their deaths. It is all I have found so far online about them.
http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1298&dat=19691017&id=XPRNAAAAIBAJ&sjid=sYoDAAAAIBAJ&pg=4650,5160511
I will not regret saying this: Their deaths were meanless losses. Their families did not discuss their death to share with the country the anxiety and anger and frustration of their children’s generation. Suicide remains shameful to many families, so we cannot expect that to change soon. Two teenagers did not change the world, and their sacrifice was not used by anyone to hasten an end to the Vietnam War.
I am glad that I was born when I was born. Just before I was a teenager, the generation ahead of me -- very frustrated young adults -- were asking us to consider that war in another country was not necessarily our war to fight. Sometimes it was. Sometimes it wasn’t. Our job, as citizens, was to know the difference between saving the world, and leaving a ruckus to others to solve.
Are we there yet?
Monday, October 6, 2014
Friday, October 3, 2014
The Forgotten War
I despise the term ¨The Forgotten War¨ and after this sentence, I will never use it again.
Others will continue using the phrase and that's important. The phrase itself is part of the war's legacy.
Others will continue using the phrase and that's important. The phrase itself is part of the war's legacy.
My father and mother's generation were molded by a war that slaughtered approximately 33,000 U.S. military personnel.
There will be a series of entries to this blog that also addresses the heroic service of American women -- nurses and others -- in the Korean War. Women suffered uniquely in Korea. They were not in combat, but as they faced their jobs and saw what the war did to human bodies, I know that PTSD had to exist in the ranks of women nurses and other female personnel. I garble this information. I cannot even start to imagine what it was like to stand in a M.A.S.H tent and look at bodies blown up.
The Korean War happened. It was horrible. It was not a ¨conflict.¨ It was a goddamned war.
How did we build a powerful economy and a healthy middle class with scarred men and women who had seen so much death and destruction?
Wednesday, October 1, 2014
Wanting to Rip, Barely Shredding
The generation that raised my generation contained military veterans, to the degree that nearly every family in the United States could sensibly assume that all children growing up in the 60’s had fathers or uncles who had served in the armed forces. This was the case, of course, but pop culture for the times -- the 1960’s -- informed girls like me that all men were in the Army at some time in their lives.
I rarely thought of the other branches of the armed forces. Uncle Jack served in the Navy. The Army, for some reason, was the real deal, and men who flew planes or emptied big guns off ships were impressive men, but they weren’t in the Army! Kids make up standards like this in their heads and it can take a few knocks from life to correct us. I eventually learned, whether through school or through stories from men in the Navy or in the Marines, or later from men who had served in the Coast Guard, that ¨service¨ is the action, and where that service occurs is based more on luck than on choice. Wars start quickly, or so we think.
I knew that my maternal grandfather loved his uniform and was proud of his Sergeant’s rank when he left the Army in 1919. I have a photo of him fully decked out in his uniform and there is no more dashing figure I ever need to seek. Eddie Gildea was an extraordinarly handsome man.
He spoke to me a few times about ¨a friend¨ he knew from his army time who saw combat in Belgium, and came home without a foot. Eddie Gildea showed me a map, struggling some with his own spelling and reading, and pointed to Belgium. The map was very old. Grampa enjoyed maps. I was nine years old and I enjoyed him with his maps.
That map disappeared sometime in 1974. Just before it did, I noticed it crumpled in a packing box during one of my family moves. It was dated 1925. On it, Prussia still existed, and there was no Cold War to fight. I wish I had kept that map. Eddie Gildea had died 3 years earlier.
Now, Vietnam combat veterans are grandfathers. I do not know if they guide their grandchildren with the same expectation that some things need to be learned. (I wasn’t given the option of not learning something if the men in my life decided I needed to know it.) We can’t step into other people’s homes and lives and make them do stuff, but, think that a 12 year old kid needs to see a map of North and South Vietnam, circa 1967, and have someone explain why that information matters.
Uncle Jack never spoke about the Navy with me. If he told anyone else what happened during his service in the Pacific, I never heard those stories either. Men handle their pasts in whatever fashion is best for them. Jack remained ¨the funny one¨ in my life, constantly saying things under his breath in public to make me laugh too loud in front of other people. He would have my mother and sister holding their stomachs as he refused to let up on some critique of a bad t.v. character. I wondered often if his sense of humor -- fast as lightening, scathingly accurate -- was a way for him to not discuss painful things witnessed in the Pacific Theater. I heard some comment from his siblings that he served on a mine sweeper, had enlisted at the age of 17, and came home tight lipped. He had a very successful career with International Harvester, and lived in Chicago most of that career, which, to me, simply meant he was in the second coolest city on the planet.
I do not like single day holidays honoring veterans. I do not like some forms of ceremony. At times I am not fond of parades.
Veterans for me were better than those observed dates, because they were a 24/7 experience. They were three men who each had a piece of a calendar year -- Uncle Jack on his vacation visits, my father when he came home late from the office, Grampa when he wandered up the street to tend to some electrical problem at the house -- that occupied my time whether they wanted me tagging along or not. I was so obnoxious when I was a little girl. The three of them always seemed to have the same solution to my mouthiness and hyperactivity: A firm swat of fingers across the top of my head generally silenced me long enough to let one of them get a word in.
I was discussing grave markers with a cousin of my father today. My last living uncle at age 89 died recently and there has been a streak of time -- bureaucratic time -- required to iron out his finances and arrange the burial. He was a veteran. His life was troubled after he left the Army. He did not play a role in my upbringing. Discovering that he existed at all, played a role.
Which I will write about later.
It’s the kind of autumn night I favor. Very cool, but it was warm during the day. Fog tonight. Some people in my life are upsetting me, some are not. I always say that perception matters more than people want it to matter. What I saw and heard growing up is not what other members of my family saw and heard, and vice versa. Our relationships are either solid, and can withstand the most terrible of stresses, or they break apart easily because they are based on superficial bullshit. I feel that three men in my childhood steered me to expect certain things from men in general, and I do, and that’s a problem, often.
Tuesday, September 30, 2014
It's still 1969
War is not what I know. Foolish people try to write about what they haven’t experienced.
I do know war’s damage when a man comes home, secures a job, marries, and raises a family while he has Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and is not diagnosed with PTSD because in 1953, who the hell ever heard of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder? It didn’t exist.
Up to March 3rd, 2005, I saw that look in Dad’s face. His face would settle into something convulsed with rage. There is a white shine in a man’s eyes who feels the fear of years earlier in a jungle or in a ditch. Dad had that look. I asked him about it once. I asked my father why he looked so scared.
Dad was standing in the garage behind his in-laws' house on Washington Avenue in Chatham, New Jersey, in 1968, and grinned widely. Years later he told me he grinned at me when I asked him that question because he did not want me to be afraid.
¨What’s the matter with you?¨ I had barked at him while I was holding some tools he used to fix his car. It was a miserably hot summer day in small town New Jersey.
The answer to that question was not his answer. It was a voice behind me.
My maternal grandfather -- the love of my life with a pipe -- was speaking.
¨Nothing’s wrong with your Dad,¨ Eddie Gildea ruffled my long dark brown hair and poked my upper arms with his long fingers. ¨Stop being a brat.¨
I leaned back on Eddie Gildea’s chest and felt him exhale heavily. I smelled his pipe’s tobacco. I heard his low, growling laugh.
Eddie Gildea wore the uniform of the United States Army in 1918 at the end of World War One, and Dad wore the uniform at the end of the Korean conflict in 1953. Both men bonded over harsh coffee and cheap cigars. Grampa -- Eddie Gildea to some, Grampa to me -- blew smoke rings for me on the front porch of his house for probably five years straight.
Eddie Gildea -- on a sunny afternoon when I know I was in 5th grade -- once rubbed my father’s forearm hard and told him to calm down. They were both standing in the driveway of the home I lived in for many years -- a home in a well-to-do New Jersey town filled with men like my father. Veterans.
Dad died in 2005.
Eddie died in 1971. Eddie Gildea was a tall, lanky, lovely man who walked with a smooth stride, confident and proud. He came from a long line of Irish-Americans hardily bred in Pennsylvania.
He loved me because I was such a pain in the ass. He loved my older brother for being more intelligent than he was. He loved my younger sister for being independent.
Dad and Eddie raised me with patience and raised eyebrows and all the body language of absolute exasperation. I ran to them at the Chatham train station -- Dad the commuter, and Eddie the Electrician.
I twist around in some nights, on my bed, aching to hear one of them yell at me the way they both used to yell at me. I ran miles in my town, through the public school playground and across the Catholic School parking lot, to the public library, to the main street of stores, to the side street with the public pool. I picked fights on those runs with ¨public school girls” who wanted to bend fists with ¨Catholic school girls.” No one could know that I would convert to another faith in 1998. All that mattered -- back then in the late 1960's -- was that men were behind me, and pushing me to be brave and loud and on top of a fight.
Twice, in second grade, I walked home with bleeding lips. Twice, in second grade, Dad and Eddie -- father and grandfather -- told me to stop complaining about being beaten up.
Dad loved me and rolled his eyes at me. Eddie Gildea laughed at me and hauled me back from a scuffle with his long, strong hands. At least two times a year, sometimes three, Eddie’s son -- my Uncle Jack -- showed up to hang around for 2-3 weeks and tell far too many jokes.
I was raised by men. More to the point, I was raised by men who expected me to make myself known to others standing around me. Dad, Eddie, and Jack did not like wallflowers, and so, I was not a wallflower.
I do not think the 3 of them knew that I worshiped them. That’s okay. I kept them on their toes.
How impossible it is to raise girls now.
In the 1960s, with the world screaming about and the country torn apart by a war in Vietnam, my father, my grandfather, and my uncle sat in the living room of my childhood home one weekend day and talked about how they would send my brother to Canada. I heard them all say ¨Canada¨ several times, with sadness in their voices. With anger in their voices. That afternoon, it was a lovely sunny day outside.
All of them, veterans. All of them knowing the truth about war. The three of them not wanting my older brother to go ¨serve in a war that was not protecting our country.¨ I was 10 years old.
My older brother never needed to face the plots of my older male relatives. His age, a terrible childhood injury, and the end of conscription saved him from Vietnam.
30 years later, my father had lost his older sister to an accidental death, and was fighting off a fresh hit of prostate cancer.
Life should be preserved when a war is not saving life. Uncle Jack served in World War II and proudly knew that he and hundred of thousands of other men had saved the world.
Dad came home -- chopped up and scarred -- knowing that it no longer mattered who ruled Korea when the front was hell on earth and young men next to him in a M.A.S.H. tent were screaming in pain.
I remember the glaze in my father’s eyes. I wish that PTSD was a recognized condition in 1953. It was not, and so I was not raised by a man who had support and love and patience about his suffering. He did not have those emotions surrounding him from caring family because he fled family and did not tell them that he needed their support. His siblings and cousins had no way of knowing that he was so damaged. I knew that he saw a Chinese soldier’s head nearly severed from the neck, and that he shoved a young North Korean or Chinese teenager off his back as the kid tried to gouge his right eye out in the middle of the night in a muddy trench, and then promptly stabbed the teenager and killed him.
My father did horrible things to stay alive and come home and make me.
I don’t know if I can explain that to anyone. So, I won’t try to explain.
Monday, September 29, 2014
Pfffffth!
I have accomplishments -- interesting things that were of my doing in a corporate setting -- from the early 80's through to the early 90's.
In those years, being tapped to write a press release, or escorting a NASA astronaut to her room by the service halls to avoid the press, were all exciting shots of energy. I believed in those times that I was doing important things and contributing to changing the world just a little bit. Silly me.
In the late 80s, there was this crazy 72-hour thingy, when my boss at an engineering consultant firm, ¨Tom,¨ was trapped in a hotel in San Francisco during and after the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake.
That was the earthquake that had one of the sportscasters at the '89 Baseball World Series, Al Michaels, become an accidental primary anchor for whatever the hell was going on immediately after the earthquake.
Terrible things happened to people during and immediately after that quake. My boss returned safely to our old East Syracuse office, 3 days later, after some understandable hassles with airlines.
¨Tom¨ was -- I later learned -- ordered by a custodian of a San Francisco hotel to ¨get the hell in here¨ and stand in a doorway to a hotel supply truck delivery platform. Windows were smashing on the sidewalk and street just a few feet from where Tom had stood. Tom told me later that the custodian was rude, and ¨talked to me like I was a total idiot and he was correct."
Tom was very accurate about nearly everything. I believe, from him, I learned to not be offended when people are unemotional in emergencies.
It was for Tom's well being that the world worked out such a smooth solution to get him home. HIS boss, the President of a now long since sold-off engineering firm, had a daughter who was a travel agent. Remember, children, this was long before cell phones and email in everyone's hands. There were no smart phones, and there were no laptops.
Kim, the owner's daughter, spoke to me twice on the phone about the problems associated with getting Tom home post -earthquake. She collected information that Tom had left with me -- his credit card number, for example.
Then, Kim, her sweet and friendly voice something I always enjoyed hearing, in order to get Tom on a flight out of a huge city devastated by an earthquake, turned into plotting murderess Lucilla of Rome with her punk nephew screaming ¨“Here is the dagger the senate sends you!”
I was a still a general secretary for my boss's engineering services department. With Kim becoming an alien life force as she yelled orders to other people on her office phone, and with me running around the company offices ripping phones out of dithering receptionists' hands, we brought Tom home.
He walked into the office 3 mornings after the earthquake, threw a pile of notes at me to edit, and lit up a cigarette. (Back then, you could still smoke in a lot of offices.)
I was so proud. I had learned how to kick ass on the phone using an earthquake as an excuse. Any phone.
Those years of white collar accomplishment, office politics, and discovering all my serial bosses' extra-marital affairs ended a long time go. I do not miss them.
Tom disappeared from my daily life years ago after a near-fatal car accident almost killed him. I babysat his children 2 nights, rotating with other employees of our company, so that Tom's wife could spend more time with him at the hospital. Looking at him in the hospital bed with his entire body wrapped up in either casts or bandaging was startling, but 3 months later, I grabbed data analysis reports from his hands as he lumbered through his house in a wheelchair. I know he still works as an engineer but nears retirement.
I also know that I do not miss life in an office filled with several men who once told me that my liberal arts courses in a local college were a waste of tuition money.
I could discuss French military strategy from 1912. They could not. I had a big ego back then. But, they could build shit.
Anyway, I think I will continue to write. I do not think I care if I write about cute puppies, or The Dardanelles.
I miss, sometimes, the office adrenaline, but I do not miss the accomplishments. They were not important after all. They were not human, and they were not eternal, and other people would do cool things without me.
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