The New Yorker this week is all about war... stories from various wars, as
well as a bunch from the current conflicts.  Some of it is hard to read...
some is funny.

Here's a bit from "Soldiers' Stories," from the project Operation
Homecoming, in which distinguished American writers are helping troops tell
their stories.  I heard about the project when it started and thought it was
terrific.  Storytelling is a path to healing.

From emails to friends and family by Capt. Lisa R. Blackman, serving as a
clinical psychologist at Al Udeid Air Base, Qatar.  She wrote about the
light bulb that went off after seeing lots of troops who were reporting
sleep trouble, depression, etc.  She writes that *everyone* they see checks
off "increased guilt" on their intake form.

"At home I ask people if they have ever experienced or witnessed a traumatic
event or abuse.  But our here I ask, 'Have you ever been in combat?'
Apparently, this is a question with the power to unglue, because all four of
these troops burst into tears at the mention of the word, 'combat.'

"And when I say burst, I mean splatter -- tears running, snot flowing, and I
literally had to mop my floor after one two-hour session.  In other words, I
mean sobbing for minutes on end, unable to speak, flat-out grief by an
otherwise healthy, strong, manly guy who watches football on the weekends
and never puts the toilet seat down.

"Each time, I sit there with not a clue what to say... offering tissues...
saying I'm sorry... trying to normalize... trying to say, 'It was not your
fault that so-and-so died' and 'If you could have done differently, you
would have' and 'You had a right to be scared.'  And, even worse, 'Yes, you
killed someone, and you still deserve to go back to your family and live
your life.'

"Next time you are hanging out with a friend, think about what you would do
if he turned to you and said, 'My boss made me kill someone, and I know I'm
going to Hell for it, so why bother'  What would you say to 'normalize'
that?"

And this, from Second Lt. Brian Humpheys in Hit, Iraq, about hiding the
coffins coming home -- a subject I've been trying to write about ever since
Wes was killed in Fallujah.

"Pictures of flag-draped coffins being unloaded from Air Force transports
surface on the back reaches of the Internet, as if they were a grainy
celebrity sex video that decent people should avoid looking at.  But I think
otherwise.  The images of flag-draped coffins show the end of war as we are
meant to see it, and as we are meant to believe it.  Uniforms, flags,
patriotism, honor, sacrifice.  In these images we are not street fighters
struggling to survive and kill in a distant gangland but soldiers in the
nation's service.  They will help the families, I think.  They will help
us.  In our own way, we, too, need to believe."

Damn right.

Nick

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Nick Arnett
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Messages: 408-904-7198
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