As of July 4, 2012 the U.S.A. will be 236 years old, and it seems we got here on the
backs of two documents. The Declaration Of Independence and the U.S. Constitution,
which took us out of the realm of kings, queens, prince, princess, dukes and barons,
and into a world never seen before. The Declaration Of Independence one of the worlds
great domuments as only 1,337 words in it, and when read you can even understand it.
The U.S. Constitution has 4,400 words. It is the oldest and shortest written Constitution
of any major government in the world. And it can be read in about a half hour and
understood. Some say these two documents are out of date, there time as come and
gone and should be replaced. Replaced with what, 1,600 page bills that are hard to
read and harder to understand. No it's time for all Americans to read them again,
and if you have not read them before read them now, it's time we go back to our
past, time to read the simplicity and genius in these documents. Happy Birthday
America.
Welcome: to Words For Vets, here you will find My poems, short stories, or creative writing, you may call them anything you wish. This blog is for those who have served, because freedom isn't free. you might also see a slight bias toward the Marine Corps, because I do hold the title of United States Marine.
Sunday, July 1, 2012
Sunday, June 17, 2012
IN SEARCH OF A MEMORIAL
If you go to the National Mall in Washington, D.C. you will find three National War
Memorials of the Twentieth Century. Each Memorial impressive in it's own right.
The WW2 Memorial, dedicated to the greatest generation, the twelve million who
served, and to the 400,000 who gave their last full measure.
The Korean War Memorial dedicated to the 54,246 who lost there lives. Sometimes
called the forgotten war.
And the Vietnam Memorial, a black granite wall with all the name of the lost, 58,000
But wait, we're missing one. How could we be missing a hole war? OK, I know there
is very few left that were alive then, and the last American Veteran from WW1 passed
away in 2011. But he spent the last years of his life trying to get a WW1 memorial
built on the Mall in D.C. America was only in the war for One Year 7 Months and 6 Days
but we lost 116,516 Americans. We need to honor the Veterans who fought that war
and those who never returned.
Memorials of the Twentieth Century. Each Memorial impressive in it's own right.
The WW2 Memorial, dedicated to the greatest generation, the twelve million who
served, and to the 400,000 who gave their last full measure.
The Korean War Memorial dedicated to the 54,246 who lost there lives. Sometimes
called the forgotten war.
And the Vietnam Memorial, a black granite wall with all the name of the lost, 58,000
But wait, we're missing one. How could we be missing a hole war? OK, I know there
is very few left that were alive then, and the last American Veteran from WW1 passed
away in 2011. But he spent the last years of his life trying to get a WW1 memorial
built on the Mall in D.C. America was only in the war for One Year 7 Months and 6 Days
but we lost 116,516 Americans. We need to honor the Veterans who fought that war
and those who never returned.
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
THE WARRIOR’S CODE OF HONOR and PTSD
THE WARRIOR’S CODE OF HONOR and PTSD
Summation of what combat, is like as well as the transformation that occurs in the
combatant to produce PTSD. This code was written by a combat soldier from Korea.
Who wish to be anonymous. I think this should be read by combat vets and there loved
loved ones, hopefully this helps someone to understand what there loved one is
going through.
Summation of what combat, is like as well as the transformation that occurs in the
combatant to produce PTSD. This code was written by a combat soldier from Korea.
Who wish to be anonymous. I think this should be read by combat vets and there loved
loved ones, hopefully this helps someone to understand what there loved one is
going through.
THE WARRIOR’S CODE OF HONOR
As a combat veteran wounded in one of America’s wars, I offer to speak for those who cannot. Were the mouths of my fallen front-line friends not stopped with dust, they would testify that life revolves around honor.
In war, it is understood that you give your word of honor to do your duty – that is – stand and fight instead of running away and deserting your friends. When you keep your word despite desperately desiring to flee the screaming hell all around, you earn honor.
Earning honor under fire changes who you are. The blast furnace of battle burns away impurities encrusting your soul.
The white-hot forge of combat hammers you into a hardened, purified warrior willing to die rather than break your word to friends – your honor. Combat is scary but exciting. You never feel so alive as when being shot at without result. You never feel so triumphant as when shooting back – with result. You never feel love so pure as that burned into your heart by friends willing to die to keep their word to you. And they do.
The biggest sadness of your life is to see friends falling. The biggest surprise of your life is to survive the war. Although still alive on the outside, you are dead inside – shot thru the heart with nonsensical guilt for living while friends died.
The biggest lie of your life torments you that you could have done something more, different, to save them. Their faces are the tombstones in your weeping eyes, their souls shine the true camaraderie you search for the rest of your life but never find.
You live a different world now. You always will. Your world is about waking up night after night silently screaming, back in battle. Your world is about your best friend bleeding to death in your arms, howling in pain for you to kill him. Your world is about shooting so many enemies the gun turns red and jams, letting the enemy grab you. Your world is about struggling hand-to-hand for one more breath of life.
You never speak of your world. Those who have seen combat do not talk about it. Those who talk about it have not seen combat. You come home but a grim ghost of he who so lightheartedly went off to war. But home no longer exists. That world shattered like a mirror the first time you were shot at. The splintering glass of everything you knew fell at your feet, revealing what was standing behind it – grinning death – and you are face to face, nose to nose with it!
The shock was so great that the boy you were died of fright. He was replaced by a stranger who slipped into your body, a MAN from the Warrior’s World.
In that savage place, you give your word of honor to dance. This suicidal waltz is known as: “doing your duty.” You did your duty, survived the dance, and returned home. But not all of you came back to the civilian world. Your heart and mind are still in the Warrior’s World, far beyond the Sun. They will always be in the Warrior’s World. They will never leave, they are buried there. In that hallowed home of honor, life is about keeping your word.
People in the civilian world, however, have no idea that life is about keeping your word. They think life is about ballgames, backyards, barbecues, babies and business. The distance between the two worlds is as far as Mars from Earth. This is why, when you come home, you felt like an outsider, a visitor from another planet. You are.
Friends try to bridge the gaping gap. It is useless. They may as well look up at the sky and try to talk to a Martian as talk to you. Words fall like bricks between you. Serving with Warriors who died proving their word has made prewar friends seem too un-tested to be trusted – thus they are now mere acquaintances. The hard truth is that earning honor under fire makes you a stranger in your own home town, an alien visitor from a different world, alone in a crowd.
The only time you are not alone is when with another combat veteran. Only he understands that keeping your word, your honor, whilst standing face to face with death gives meaning and purpose to life. Only he understands that your terrifying – but thrilling – dance with death has made your old world of backyards, barbecues and ballgames seem deadly dull. Only he understands that your way of being due to combat damaged emotions is not the un-usual, but the usual, and you are OK.
A common consequence of combat is adrenaline addiction. Many combat veterans – including this writer – feel that war was the high point of our lives, and emotionally, life has been downhill ever since. This is because we came home adrenaline junkies. We got that way doing our duty in combat situations such as: crouching in a foxhole waiting for attacking enemy soldiers to get close enough for you to start shooting; hugging the ground, waiting for the signal to leap up and attack the enemy; sneaking along on a combat patrol out in no man’s land, seeking a gunfight; suddenly realizing that you are walking in the middle of a mine field.
Circumstances like these skyrocket your feelings of aliveness far, far above and beyond anything you experienced in civilian life: never have you felt so terrified – yet so thrilled;
never have you seen sky so blue, grass so green, breathed air so sweet, etc.; because dancing with death makes you feel stratospheric – nay – intergalactic aliveness. Then you come home, where the addictive, euphoric rush of aliveness/adrenaline hardly ever happens – naturally, that is.
Then what often occurs? “Quick, pass me the motorcycle” (and /or fast car, drag race, speedboat, airplane, parachute, big game hunt, extreme sport, fist fight, gun fight, etc.)
Another reason Warriors may find the rush of adrenaline attractive is because it lets them feel something rather than nothing. The dirty little secret no one talks about is that many combat veterans come home unable to feel their feelings.
It works like this. In battle, it is understood that you give your word of honor to not let your fear stop you from doing your duty. To keep your word, you must numb up/shut down your fear. But the numb-up/shut-down mechanism does not work like a tight, narrow rifle shot; it works like a broad, spreading shot gun blast. Thus when you numb up your fear, you numb up virtually all your other feelings as well.
The more combat, the more fear you must “not feel.” You may become so numbed up/shut down inside that you cannot feel much of anything. You become what is know as “battle-hardened,” meaning that you can feel hard feelings like hate and anger, but not soft, tender feelings (which is bad news for loved ones). The reason that the rush of adrenaline, alcohol, drugs, dangerous life style, etc. is so attractive is because you get to feel something, which is a step up from the awful deadness of feeling nothing.
Although you walk thru life alone, you are not lonely. You have a constant companion from combat – Death. It stands close behind, a little to the left. Death whispers in your ear; “Nothing matters outside my touch, and I have not touched you…YET!”
Death never leaves you – it is your best friend, your most trusted advisor, your wisest teacher. Death teaches you that every day above ground is a fine day.
Death teaches you to feel fortunate on good days, and bad days…well, they do not exist.
Death teaches you that merely seeing one more sunrise is enough to fill your cup of life to the brim – pressed down and running over!
Death teaches you that you can postpone its touch by earning serenity. Serenity is earned by a lot of prayer and acceptance. Acceptance is taking one step out of denial and accepting/allowing your repressed, painful combat memories to be re-lived/suffered thru/shared with other combat vets – and thus de-fused. Each time you accomplish this dreaded act of courage/desperation: the pain gets less; more tormenting combat demons hiding in the darkness of your gut – which you can feel but cannot language because they are out of sight down below the level of your awareness — are thrown out into the healing sunlight of awareness, thereby disappearing them; the less bedeviling combat demons, the more serenity earned.
Serenity is, regretfully, rather an indistinct quality, but it manifests as an immense feeling of fulfillment/satisfaction: from having proven your honor under fire; from having demonstrated to be a fact that you did your duty no matter what; and from being grateful to Higher Power/your Creator for sparing you.
It is an iron law of nature that such serenity lengthens life span to the max. Down thru the dusty centuries it has always been thus. It always will be, for what is seared into a man’s soul who stands face to face with death never changes.
WRITER’S NOTE (1)
This work attempts to describe the world as seen thru the eyes of a combat veteran. It is a world virtually unknown to the public because few veterans can talk about it.
This is unfortunate since people who are trying to understand, and make meaningful contact with combat veterans, are kept in the dark.
How do you establish a rapport with a combat veteran? It is very simple. Demonstrate to him out in the open in front of God and everybody that you too have a Code of Honor – that is, you also keep your word – no matter what!
Do it and you will forge a bond between you.
Do it not and you will not.
End of story. Case closed.
I offer these poor, inadequate words – bought not taught – in the hope that they may shed some small light on why combat veterans are like they are, and how they can fix it.
It is my life desire that this tortured work, despite its many defects, may yet still provide some tiny sliver of understanding which may blossom into tolerance – nay, acceptance – of a Warrior’s perhaps unconventional way of being due to combat-damaged emotions from doing his duty under fire.
Signed,
a Purple Heart Medal recipient who wishes to remain anonymous.
Dedicated to absent friends in unmarked graves.
Friday, March 2, 2012
The Title
The title Marine was not just bestowed upon anyone, you earned it, you had to want it deep down to obtain it. Once obtained, it can never be taken away. From that point on you are part of a brotherhood very few
can understand. Your dues were paid during active duty, your membership will never expire, it does not end with your honorable discharge, the title and brotherhood are forever.
The words honor,commitment and pride are still with you, for they are part of you. Fired in the furnaces
of boot camp, forged on the battlefields around the world. Passed on to those who would follow in your
footsteps, as the title moves down through the generations and the brotherhood lives on.
Never forget the title you now claim, was brought with blood, pain and death, wounds of the body and
wounds of the mind. The title comes at a high cost., it is not maintenance free, it comes with responsibilities.
Your honor or dishonor will reflect upon those that came before and after you. As it's said in the
Marines Hymn "to keep our honor clean we are proud to claim the title of United States Marines
Bruce Knipp
can understand. Your dues were paid during active duty, your membership will never expire, it does not end with your honorable discharge, the title and brotherhood are forever.
The words honor,commitment and pride are still with you, for they are part of you. Fired in the furnaces
of boot camp, forged on the battlefields around the world. Passed on to those who would follow in your
footsteps, as the title moves down through the generations and the brotherhood lives on.
Never forget the title you now claim, was brought with blood, pain and death, wounds of the body and
wounds of the mind. The title comes at a high cost., it is not maintenance free, it comes with responsibilities.
Your honor or dishonor will reflect upon those that came before and after you. As it's said in the
Marines Hymn "to keep our honor clean we are proud to claim the title of United States Marines
Bruce Knipp
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
MY NAME IS PARRIS ISLAND
MY NAME IS PARRIS ISLAND
If you have been here, you know my name, My name is Parris Island.
Better known as PI, you may know my younger brother San Diego better
known as SD. Between us we have seen recruits come and go by the
millions. I was officially started in 1915 if you were here when you
got here by ferry boat, then you are truly old Corps. All recruits see
my main gate only twice, once on the way in and once on the way out.
Mostly you come by bus in the middle of the night. Tall, short, fat,
skinny, Black, White, long hair, short hair. You come through my main
gate laughing some scared, mostly you act like teenagers, hell mostly
you are teenagers. You each come here for your own reasons, but most
come to test themselves, most need a direction in their lives.
As you pass through my main gate your lives will change from that point
on. I hope to see you leave as Marines, but you will not all leave
together as Marines. Some will leave by themselves ,not Marines. They
did not make the goal, my heart goes out to them, but not everyone can
be a Marine.
Today my heart is full of pride, for the next graduation of recruits,
now Marines, are leaving my front gate, teenagers no more, but young men
and women with a history to live up to. 13 weeks and just look at the
change. You know this is a happy day for me, but my best days are yet to
come. That's when these Marines come back to see me 20, 30, 40, years
from now. Oh yea, a lot of the old ones come back to see me, they have
not forgotten Old Parris Island and I have not forgotten them. Former Marines
and I have this bond, it's in our blood, it's Pride, it is where it all started for
both of us. My sad days are remembering the ones that can't come back to
see me those that were killed in WW1, WW11, Korea, Vietnam, Beirut, Iraq,
Afghanistan and all the little actions around the world. Hey, i've got to go,
have a bus load coming in tonight and some new Marines leaving in the
morning. Semper Fi!! You all come back to see me, you hear!
Bruce Knipp
If you have been here, you know my name, My name is Parris Island.
Better known as PI, you may know my younger brother San Diego better
known as SD. Between us we have seen recruits come and go by the
millions. I was officially started in 1915 if you were here when you
got here by ferry boat, then you are truly old Corps. All recruits see
my main gate only twice, once on the way in and once on the way out.
Mostly you come by bus in the middle of the night. Tall, short, fat,
skinny, Black, White, long hair, short hair. You come through my main
gate laughing some scared, mostly you act like teenagers, hell mostly
you are teenagers. You each come here for your own reasons, but most
come to test themselves, most need a direction in their lives.
As you pass through my main gate your lives will change from that point
on. I hope to see you leave as Marines, but you will not all leave
together as Marines. Some will leave by themselves ,not Marines. They
did not make the goal, my heart goes out to them, but not everyone can
be a Marine.
Today my heart is full of pride, for the next graduation of recruits,
now Marines, are leaving my front gate, teenagers no more, but young men
and women with a history to live up to. 13 weeks and just look at the
change. You know this is a happy day for me, but my best days are yet to
come. That's when these Marines come back to see me 20, 30, 40, years
from now. Oh yea, a lot of the old ones come back to see me, they have
not forgotten Old Parris Island and I have not forgotten them. Former Marines
and I have this bond, it's in our blood, it's Pride, it is where it all started for
both of us. My sad days are remembering the ones that can't come back to
see me those that were killed in WW1, WW11, Korea, Vietnam, Beirut, Iraq,
Afghanistan and all the little actions around the world. Hey, i've got to go,
have a bus load coming in tonight and some new Marines leaving in the
morning. Semper Fi!! You all come back to see me, you hear!
Bruce Knipp
Friday, February 10, 2012
MY NAME IS E.G.A.
MY NAME IS E.G.A.
My name is Eagle Globe and Anchor, sometimes known as the E.G.A. I am
found in every state, city ,town or village in the country. I am found on some ring fingers and engraved on forearms in ink, I can be found on the front doors of homes and on the front yard flag poles just under the Stars and Stripes. I appear on cars and trucks, in back windows and bumpers,
trunk lids and tailgates, front grills and Lic.plates. I am found on book covers and posters, pictures and plaques hanging on walls. My likeness is found on necklaces and key chains tee shirts and jackets, hats, belt buckles and coats. You will find me in lesser known places that Marines know and others don't. Like the base of the flag pole at the Vietnam Memorial Wall, were I shine, because Marines from 8th and I polish me everyday, a new tradition is born. You will also find me on head stones spread across this land. But the place I shine brightest can not be seen, for it is in the hearts of everyman and woman who are known, as Marines.
Bruce Knipp
My name is Eagle Globe and Anchor, sometimes known as the E.G.A. I am
found in every state, city ,town or village in the country. I am found on some ring fingers and engraved on forearms in ink, I can be found on the front doors of homes and on the front yard flag poles just under the Stars and Stripes. I appear on cars and trucks, in back windows and bumpers,
trunk lids and tailgates, front grills and Lic.plates. I am found on book covers and posters, pictures and plaques hanging on walls. My likeness is found on necklaces and key chains tee shirts and jackets, hats, belt buckles and coats. You will find me in lesser known places that Marines know and others don't. Like the base of the flag pole at the Vietnam Memorial Wall, were I shine, because Marines from 8th and I polish me everyday, a new tradition is born. You will also find me on head stones spread across this land. But the place I shine brightest can not be seen, for it is in the hearts of everyman and woman who are known, as Marines.
Bruce Knipp
Monday, February 6, 2012
THE UNINVITED
THE UNINVITED
A landscape once lush with fields of crops, grass laden hills with wild flowers as blankets of color. Small islands of trees and bushes dot the country side, with small quaint villages tucked away down old country roads. The sweet smell of fresh air bathed in the warm sun light of a soft spring day, where song bird calls, fill the air. Such was the land before the great war, the war to end all wars.
The war came, it came uninvited, and it came for an extended stay. The once dark rich brown dirt was now black from all the blood shed that soaked into the ground till
it seemed it couldn't adsorb anymore. Grass and flowers grow no more, long ago stomped down by a million soldiers feet, trees that once stood proud, now nothing but twisted splintered shapes devoid of limbs, almost unrecognizable as trees anymore.
A haze now covered the sky filtering out the sun, and the stench of war fills your nostrils with the smells of death, and the only birds seen are vultures circling over head. Between the trenches of the apposing armies is no mans land, and the only man to walk there unafraid is the grim reaper himself.
Over the top, and out of the trenches the opposing army advances into no mans land.
Now the silence is broken, and the sounds of war erupt, explosions and the sounds of bullets, noise so loud you can almost not hear the death screams of the man next to you. A short time later all falls silent, and the thousand yards between trenches is once again littered with the dead and wounded. When the war started
on the 28 of June 1914 they said they'ed be home for Christmas, they just didn't tell them what year.
65 million soldiers from 6 major countries would fight in this war, 10 million would never come home, and
10 million civilians would also die from war, starvation and disease.
Nothing last forever, and so it is with war, on the 11th day, of the 11th month, at the 11th hour 1919 the war came to and end. The land will return to it's former beauty, and the soldiers will try to forget all the sights and sounds and smells of war.
The war was won, but the peace was lost. In 1939 a mere 20 years it would begin again.
Now playing at your favorite battlefield, WW2, THE SEQUEL.
Bruce Knipp
A landscape once lush with fields of crops, grass laden hills with wild flowers as blankets of color. Small islands of trees and bushes dot the country side, with small quaint villages tucked away down old country roads. The sweet smell of fresh air bathed in the warm sun light of a soft spring day, where song bird calls, fill the air. Such was the land before the great war, the war to end all wars.
The war came, it came uninvited, and it came for an extended stay. The once dark rich brown dirt was now black from all the blood shed that soaked into the ground till
it seemed it couldn't adsorb anymore. Grass and flowers grow no more, long ago stomped down by a million soldiers feet, trees that once stood proud, now nothing but twisted splintered shapes devoid of limbs, almost unrecognizable as trees anymore.
A haze now covered the sky filtering out the sun, and the stench of war fills your nostrils with the smells of death, and the only birds seen are vultures circling over head. Between the trenches of the apposing armies is no mans land, and the only man to walk there unafraid is the grim reaper himself.
Over the top, and out of the trenches the opposing army advances into no mans land.
Now the silence is broken, and the sounds of war erupt, explosions and the sounds of bullets, noise so loud you can almost not hear the death screams of the man next to you. A short time later all falls silent, and the thousand yards between trenches is once again littered with the dead and wounded. When the war started
on the 28 of June 1914 they said they'ed be home for Christmas, they just didn't tell them what year.
65 million soldiers from 6 major countries would fight in this war, 10 million would never come home, and
10 million civilians would also die from war, starvation and disease.
Nothing last forever, and so it is with war, on the 11th day, of the 11th month, at the 11th hour 1919 the war came to and end. The land will return to it's former beauty, and the soldiers will try to forget all the sights and sounds and smells of war.
The war was won, but the peace was lost. In 1939 a mere 20 years it would begin again.
Now playing at your favorite battlefield, WW2, THE SEQUEL.
Bruce Knipp
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