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#1
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Gilligan wrote: You're no pussy. FYI I've got immediate family in Bagdad, Airborne MP. The Army gets it share too. I hope they're safe. My thoughts are with our people -- of whatever branch of service -- wherever they're deployed. I got a call last week from a friend who's going to Kosovo for a year. I'd almost forgotten that we were still there. I have many friends in Iraq now too. I told them before they left: "You're an American soldier. So hold your head high. But you're in a combat zone, so keep your ****ing head down. You figure it out." |
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#2
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"The One" wrote in message oups.com... Gilligan wrote: You're no pussy. FYI I've got immediate family in Bagdad, Airborne MP. The Army gets it share too. I hope they're safe. My thoughts are with our people -- of whatever branch of service -- wherever they're deployed. I got a call last week from a friend who's going to Kosovo for a year. I'd almost forgotten that we were still there. I have many friends in Iraq now too. I told them before they left: "You're an American soldier. So hold your head high. But you're in a combat zone, so keep your ****ing head down. You figure it out." I tell him to keep his head down. There's stress every time the phone rings. All he wants is to be able to spend sometime in a place where he doesn't have to have a buddy with him and carrying arms. His "bedroom" has 50+ bullet holes in it. He's under the gun 24/7 for months on end. He was just a kid when he went in. |
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#3
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Gilligan wrote:
"The One" wrote in message oups.com... Gilligan wrote: You're no pussy. FYI I've got immediate family in Bagdad, Airborne MP. The Army gets it share too. I hope they're safe. My thoughts are with our people -- of whatever branch of service -- wherever they're deployed. I got a call last week from a friend who's going to Kosovo for a year. I'd almost forgotten that we were still there. I have many friends in Iraq now too. I told them before they left: "You're an American soldier. So hold your head high. But you're in a combat zone, so keep your ****ing head down. You figure it out." I tell him to keep his head down. There's stress every time the phone rings. All he wants is to be able to spend sometime in a place where he doesn't have to have a buddy with him and carrying arms. His "bedroom" has 50+ bullet holes in it. He's under the gun 24/7 for months on end. He was just a kid when he went in. People seldom come out of a deployment like that with the same mental state that they go in with, from what I've seen. When I got back from my deployment, I had a hard time going to a park with my kids for a long time. I was worried about landmines. I was only comfortable walking on hardball. I have another friend who still reaches for his protective mask every time they test the civil defense sirens. Aside from physically being OK, I also hope that he comes out of it in good shape. If he has some issues (like those above) I hope he won't think it's not 'manly' to get some assistance, and that there's assistance for him if he needs it. Stress like that just isn't natural. |
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