A Birthday
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Some of us were not Marines in their youth. Perhaps some of us foolishly joined other branches of the service in those young and tender years. I joined the Army myself. I picked an armed service as a career choice because I knew I couldnt make it in college and didnt want to stay anywhere near my hard drinking parents. I picked the Army because I liked the uniforms so I though. Isnt that the reason everyone joins a branch of the service.
What I couldnt see through the golden glitter of the presentations was a recruiter who must have been behind in his quotas. He wined and dined my alcoholic parents until they must have been overjoyed to have their non-scholarly daughter whisked off to basic training in the South. No one ever mentioned segregation.
No one ever mentioned the military mind either. Those who join the Marines become one for life. Gung Ho. Semper Fi. All those of us in the Army are left with are recruiting slogans .Be all you can be Go Army.
We in the OD green of the sixties, worked at office jobs during the day and partied at night. The miracle of the Enlisted Mans Club, never mentioning the fact that not all of us were men, dawned on me at the same time as Whiskey Sours and 7/7s did. Yes, the Marines drank a bit too, but they continued training with a passion that was lacking in us partyers..
This morning as we were heading to one of Gs last visits to the doctors office, I saw a funny shape on the side of a city bus. This has to be earned said the caption. They gave G one of these when he was in the Army. Officers get sabers. We laughed together and drove on. A Marine wouldnt laugh.
All I have left after my few years in the service is eight years of college thanks to the GI bill. You bet I am grateful. I also have a passion toward peace. I support the individual soldiers, I support their dreams, I support their passions. I dont support war.
We have one tow truck driver who has been out of the Marines for years.
Semper Fi, he yells as he comes in my office.
What can I say to match this passionate programming that may one day be needed. Go Army, I reply. But doesnt quite make it.
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USMC Birthday:
My dad was an Army man. He didn’t have the overt pride that Marines seem to have, but I’m pretty sure he was proud of his time spent in the service during WW II. No one in their right mind supports war, but I’m glad there are people willing to defend our country. What we are defending against gets murkier and murkier nowadays. Thanks for your service, G.
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I was married to a Marine…he talked of his VietNam years as a Marine like a boy speaks of his years at summer camp…he extended twice during those years…he’s the same guy who scared me to death with his violence and intolerance and intimidation of a 2 year old and 4 year old…I’m not the type to be a Marine wife but I sure did learn to iron those goddam shirt sleeves properly!!!
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A complex, and beautiful, entry indeed.
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http://opendiary.com/entryview.asp?authorcode=C100185&entry=11209…..an entry you might want to read; nicely done..
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Thanks – for several reasons.
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My dad was a navy man for 35 years…I also thank you for many reasons…people forget so quickly what the military provides us with… Hugs to you! P.S. thanks for explaining “stir”…smiles…..
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Nice entry. Thanks for helping me remember the many vets in my life — Dad, Navy (WWII). The 5 boys in my high school who died in Viet Nam. The mean little marine I dated just out of high school. The whole darn Coast Guard crew of the North Star, my nephews, one a marine, one in the army. And the men and women they show in silence every single night on PBS, dead in Iraq.
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I really stopped by to tell you that another blanket idea is to pumch slits along the edges and weave satin ribbon in and out.
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I have a hard time seeing you in a uniform! But thanks to people like you who were/are willing to serve. xoxo
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Hugs
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Good entry. Brings up many memories. 🙂
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