Casualties of War

Discussion in 'Poetry' started by halfpint04, Aug 16, 2009.

  1. halfpint04

    halfpint04 Member

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    He didn’t hug me when he got off the plane that day
    Instead he made sure to keep my at arms length away
    Because hugs are how you show you are close to someone
    And no matter how hard he tried to block out the images and sounds
    he remembered watching
    everyone close to him blown away
    And buried with the shrapnel parts that tore through them

    That’s the moment I realized that
    He left a boy and came home a used empty shell of a man
    Whose eyes aged and matured far beyond the years of a 25 year old boy
    Eyes that were glazed over in stories that I was not yet ready to hear
    And he knew that
    So through zippered lips he spoke nothing
    And through arms tied behind his back
    With a self made restraint jacket
    He went on living
    Because that is what he was trained to do

    And though he was no stranger to insomnia
    The nights turned to days a lot quicker lately
    And he would struggle through night tremors and terrors
    Until the day I found him
    Rocking himself back and forth constantly chanting
    “No body makes it out of here alive anymore.”
    “No body makes it out of here alive anymore”
    And he tattooed “Sorry”
    And the remembrance of names all over his body
    But the biggest one of all was the one that read “Guilt”
    Covering a bullet wound and scared flesh
    Because you’re not suppose to leave anyone behind
    And for him to make it out alive meant that someone else had to die

    And that’s the day that I told his father
    “Not all casualties of war come home in body bags”
    And he is living proof of that
    Before as he breathes breaths of life into his chest
    His eyes walk with the dead

    And once I was safe enough to touch again
    With hands as rough as the shrapnel that left him broken
    He traced over old battle wounds on my
    Face, legs, and arms
    Quizzingly questioning their origins
    And when time took its toll on my memory
    Wiping it clean of blocked out tales
    He scolded me spouting anger from his quiet shell


    “how could someone forget their wounds?”
    because each comet carved crater left on his body made him stronger
    and each mark was a memory of someone who didn’t make it
    And if he could tattoo names and dog tags on his heart he would
    Because those stories and those people are the ones that kept him going

    When we’re little we are told
    “every time a bell rings an angel gets his wings.”
    Only he has already been through hell
    And when he dies he doesn’t want his wings
    Because he doesn’t want to sit up there have to watch this happen again

    So while we deck ourselves out in yellow ribbons
    And American flags made in China
    He leads protest chants of
    “bring our brothers and sisters home”
    because it’s hard to be patriotic when you’ve been forgotten
    because when he looks for handouts from strangers
    he gets nothing but dirty looks
    and when he wants to tell his stories
    no one wants to listen
    because it’s easier to remain distant
    when you have no clue

    So as Americans
    We support causes from a far
    Because that’s what we are told to do
    Forgetting the reality of what is going on
    Our homes are safe havens
    Where as long as we watch the news as a family
    We can stay hidden in our turtle shells
    Forgetting the mothers, fathers, brothers, and sisters
    That are hurting from casualties of war.
     
  2. Jamaica2u

    Jamaica2u Member

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    Very touching. I can relate. My brother served in Viet-Nam. After decades, he still rarely speaks of it.
     
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