My Brother, My Soldier

Just-a-Writer

Posted: May 4, 08 4:41am

Bear with me, or just skip this, it doesn't matter. This may just be little more than a rant, a lingering, a spillage of broken thoughts into words in order for me to sort them out. Hell, I might not even hit the Submit button when I'm done.

It's a little after 5am here, and around 4am I got a call from an old friend. I call him 'the baby brother I never had', which is actually a very hateful thing to say since I have a little brother, but that's another story. I'm going to call him Chad to skip having to say "my brotherly friend" every little whip stitch.

Chad enlisted in the military 11 years ago. He was young, married with a small child, and needed solid employment. That, coupled with a love for extreme sports, made the military seem like the perfect job. He's leaving the military soon now, becoming a civilian again.

So, Chad called. I was scared due to the hour that he called. Four in the morning is the time of day that you get calls telling you somebody has been in a wreck, had a heart attack, or died. The call came in 'unknown' so I had no clue who was calling, and when he told me who it was, my first reaction was to ask what was wrong, is everybody ok.

Once we established that nobody had died, was near death, or physically injured, he began to speak. He was looking for my real brother's number; they had been friends since they were eight years old, and that was who Chad was in the habit of calling when things went sideways on him. I confirmed the number he had, then asked him what was going on. Luckily, unlike pre-Iraq Chad who was always stoic and reserved, post-Iraq Chad is very talkative.

Chad was feeling 'out of place'. "People, either I can't stand them, or they don't like me. That leaves me with nobody."

I won't even begin to try to relay the entire conversation, it flowed and shifted like the sands in a river. I flowed along with it, whisking my oar when needed.

Chad had spent 15 months in Iraq, he said that he had been in trucks that were hit with IEDs 7 times, he had even been in one where an MPG flew in through the front window, breezed past the back of his head, and blew a hole "the size of a beach ball" out the back window. Most of these events he took in stride, while in Iraq, because over there these things were 'normal'. Even if they made it difficult to sleep at night.

He clearly, in hindsight, had suffered multiple untreated concussions because of all of this. He would "soldier on" (I know why the phrase is that now) because he was still capable of being mobile. He said he "got screwed out of a purple heart because I didn't see the medic about it". Yeah, I don't think that's fair either, but it just seems like a splinter in the board that he got screwed with. He suffers spells of extreme headaches (in the back of the head, where his hair is now discolored due to the MPG) that get so extreme they make him vomit.

Eb and flow. "I have emotions now, and I don't know what to do with them. I hate civilians, they don't do anything right. There's no honor there."

He told me how he resents, to the point of wanting to lash out, when people come up to him and thank him for what he's done. He says none of it was good, none of it was something they would thank him for if they knew. He followed orders. Even when he disagreed, he followed orders.

Just as med students play catch at 2am with a cadaver's heart to keep their spirits up as they carry on into their 36th hour of work, soldiers, as a coping mechanism, would find things humorous that 'civilians' would find sick and appalling. Looking back in awe himself at what they had done and found humor in, he now feels like everybody is staring at him. Everybody is wondering what is wrong with him. Back to the feeling of not fitting in.

The saying that goes, "There are no atheists in foxholes" is wrong. According to Chad, all you have are atheists in foxholes, because they know that no god worth worshiping would permit war. No god would want his children to even begin to view the things they saw in Iraq as normal.

He was on a cell phone, out in the middle of nowhere at his uncle's, so his signal dropped a few times. Each time, I gripped the phone willing him to call back, because I knew he wasn't done. Better to call me back and talk some more than to let his emotions carry him off.

Chad is not suicidal. Like myself, he is not wired that way. Our anger phrases include 'grudge', 'revenge', and 'retaliation'. For me, it usually ends up in a scathing editorial showing up in the paper I write for. It's a quality my editor enjoys and reaps the rewards for. We both use the phrase, "I don't get suicidal, I get homicidal." I'm a writer, he's a soldier. So it's best you keep talking to me, Chad, kill them verbally through words to me.

No, on a day to day basis, he would not randomly hurt or kill anybody. He is a reasonable man. But in the wee hours of the night, when he's taken 2 Ambien and 2 klonopin to try to get to sleep and it still evades him.... who knows. But he reached for the phone. And after my brother's number didn't get him help, he dialed mine.

His words race around in my head.

"These are the guidelines about double-tapping..."

"....and whenever the locals heard we had lost somebody, they buckled down because they knew..."

"One guy told me that I'll never be a civilian again, I'll just live among them...."

"....marking our shells (this is doodling on them, they did it out of boredom) was against the Geneva Convention, but chopping off guys' heads isn't?"

".... then we found this big, bad jihadist hiding under a bed..."

I realize that my friend, my brother, is hurting. And I don't know what to do for him but listen. With all of the wonders of modern medicine, they don't know enough about the brain to understand what the scarring and injuries they see on a CT scan really mean in regards to what has been damaged. They can tell a wounded soldier that they may have headaches, hearing problems, dizziness, but unlike a severed limb they don't know what to reconnect to fix it.

The human brain is too complex for us to figure it out, hell, it's too complex for us to even use all of it. So they try this med, and they try that med, then they settle for this grouping of meds. And the inner workings of the mind are even more baffling. They can't explain, let alone fix, the changes in a person.

Old Chad was confident, New Chad feels lost in his own home. Old Chad was popular, the center of attention. New Chad feels alienated from everybody around him. Old Chad was reserved with showing his emotions, and now New Chad has emotions he can't understand that weigh him down daily.

I'm very close friends with Chad's wife, Terry, as well. "What has Terry told you about me?"

She's confused about how to deal with the changes in him. The changes aren't all bad; he's more open, affectionate, and talkative. But they are all new. It's like living with a different man. I told him she had told me about him reaching for his rifle in his sleep, and about him saying, in his sleep, that he wanted to go home. When she asked him where home was, he said Iraq. Not that he longs for the nightmare that was day-to-day life there, but because that had become his new definition of 'normal'.

After he had ridden the current of emotions for a full hour, he sounded more at ease. He said he would when I told him to call me back anytime he needed to talk, I'm always here. He even said he thought he might be able to go to sleep now. I hope he can, and I hope it's dreamless. For his sake.

27 Comments // 11 Members

Posted: May 4, 08 7:30am

Bear with me, or just skip this, it doesn't matter. This may just be little more than a rant, a lingering, a spillage o...

Wow

JustaWriter,

Thank you for sharing this. I imagine trying to process all that transpired in this conversation was tough. Your narrative was beautiful. I feel for you, for Chad, for his wife. This is the reality of this war. Are these folks doomed? My hope is that we society will demand medical and psychiatric help for our loved ones.

My best to you. You seem like an incredibly intuitive supportive person. Please take care of you so you can be there for them. So post away. I get it and I care!

Lynda

Posted: May 4, 08 7:38am

Wow

JustaWriter,

Thank you for sharing this. I imagine trying to process all that transpired in this conversation was t...

Thank you. My husband was asleep, so I couldn't hash out the phone call with him. I had to figure out a way to process what he had said.

I went ahead and posted it because I know Chad isn't the only one going through this.

Posted: May 4, 08 8:00am

Bear with me, or just skip this, it doesn't matter. This may just be little more than a rant, a lingering, a spillage o...

Thank you, JaW.

My brother-in-law returned from Vietnam in the late 60's in pretty much the same shape. He told me he could no longer believe in God based on what he'd experienced over there. He witnessed - more than once - innocent women and children that were running to them for safety and protection, being shot down because they had explosives strapped to them. My sister said he spent years waking up screaming. He said he didn't sign up for that. It changed him at his core.

That was forty years ago. With patience, love and support, he has found himself again, and for the first time in years, he is comfortable living in his own skin again. He doesn't wake up screaming any more.

Chad is blessed to have you in his life. And so are we.

Peace, Jo

Posted: May 4, 08 8:19am

Bear with me, or just skip this, it doesn't matter. This may just be little more than a rant, a lingering, a spillage o...

Hi JaW

I read your story with great interest, From experience I will say to you "Chad's healing process is well underway"..he is talking about it..your a great medicine for him as your listening and understand his emtions !

Posted: May 4, 08 8:29am

Thank you, JaW.

My brother-in-law returned from Vietnam in the late 60's in pretty much the same shape. He told me he co...

I told him that they've had PTSD casualties from every war, they just gave it different names instead of trying to help these men.

SOLDIER'S HEART (Civil War)

shell shock (this is a World War I & Viet Nam)

battle fatigue (World War II)

operational exhaustion (Korean War)

My uncle went to Viet Nam too. He slept on our couch for a while when he got back, and I couldn't go hear him when he slept. I might've woke him, and he came up to kill. He'd also break out yelling in Vietnamese at times.

I think he finally got where he could sleep, but he harbored a lot of hatred that came home with him.

I just hope Chad can find his peace, I can't even find simple words to describe how he sounded on the phone. Just tell me it didn't take all of forty years.

Posted: May 4, 08 8:32am

Bear with me, or just skip this, it doesn't matter. This may just be little more than a rant, a lingering, a spillage o...

what a good friend you are JaW

One truism: War is hell

It's easier to start a war than to keep the peace. And once a war is started it is hard to stop. Two things our dubious leader should have considered seven years ago.

Posted: May 4, 08 8:35am

Hi JaW

I read your story with great interest, From experience I will say to you "Chad's healing process is well under...

Chad called himself "institutionalize". That broke my heart, because I've only ever heard it in reference to inmates that have spent so much time in prison that they can't acclimate to the outside world anymore.

He now had 4 daughters and a son, he needs to be able to be there for them. He wants to be able to be there for them. They see daddy as a war hero, not as a long-term ex-con. The last thing he sees himself as is a hero.