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anthony
Founder
Combat vs. Civilian Life
Even today I can relate to the movie, The Hurt Locker, especially the ending of the movie where he is standing in the supermarket and the biggest decision is now what cereal to choose for breakfast. Whilst it is a movie, the writers got it bang on the money IMHO, being that the overwhelming desire to return to a combat zone where you know there are vastly more important issues at hand, of which you can assist in some small way, whether the war is a total concoction or not, its about our mates, about saving lives and keeping alive other soldiers, regardless of the politics.
I actually still dwell on this every now and then, and even nearly 9 years after my last deployment, I still feel of more significance from the feelings associated to being within a combat zone and the decisions we make daily compared to going to the local shopping mall and wonder what pair of jeans I need to buy from this massive range.
I listened to a lot of older vets who told me that some things just need time, and nothing you do about them will change much without it, and I can totally understand what they said nearly 9 years after my last one, and I can see a shift back towards being more civilian oriented than military, though at the same time, I know I would slip back into that military role within a week if needed... which I do find scary at times.
I am actually back to accepting that a choice of jeans is actually an important decision in my life again now, as operational zones is behind me. Be interesting to see what I feel and think when 20 years comes around from my last deployment. Will it all just be a spec in my past?
Even today I can relate to the movie, The Hurt Locker, especially the ending of the movie where he is standing in the supermarket and the biggest decision is now what cereal to choose for breakfast. Whilst it is a movie, the writers got it bang on the money IMHO, being that the overwhelming desire to return to a combat zone where you know there are vastly more important issues at hand, of which you can assist in some small way, whether the war is a total concoction or not, its about our mates, about saving lives and keeping alive other soldiers, regardless of the politics.
I actually still dwell on this every now and then, and even nearly 9 years after my last deployment, I still feel of more significance from the feelings associated to being within a combat zone and the decisions we make daily compared to going to the local shopping mall and wonder what pair of jeans I need to buy from this massive range.
I listened to a lot of older vets who told me that some things just need time, and nothing you do about them will change much without it, and I can totally understand what they said nearly 9 years after my last one, and I can see a shift back towards being more civilian oriented than military, though at the same time, I know I would slip back into that military role within a week if needed... which I do find scary at times.
I am actually back to accepting that a choice of jeans is actually an important decision in my life again now, as operational zones is behind me. Be interesting to see what I feel and think when 20 years comes around from my last deployment. Will it all just be a spec in my past?