We all deal with stress in different ways. My personal strategy was to delay dealing with many issues, to focus on the tasks at hand. Busy was always good. The rear area provided way too much time to think.
Field medics put wounded troops on medevacs. Once we robbed The Reaper, they were loaded on the chopper. Our job was done. That was the end of the story. I didn’t think about the permanent results of their injuries. I didn’t think about how their lives were inalterably changed.
I never thought about the dead. I never thought about parents, wives and other loved ones who would receive the remains and weep. These thoughts put you over the edge. A soldier can only take so much thinking. Put them on the chopper and wish them well, if they were still breathing. We would remember…later.
So I thought I was battle hardened. My tour was coming to a close. I heard that a friend had been killed in a helicopter crash. It felt right to go and pay my final respects. The field morgue was all too accessible to medics.
They gave my friend a promotion and some nice medals. The military shows reverence to their fallen. I watched as the mortician unzipped the body. It was him. I saw the big tag attached to his toe. I drew my gaze upwards to his face, noting the teeth marks where he screamed before impact. The silence was thick, until the mortician rezipped the bag, over his face, to the top of the bag, which cause me to gasp for my own breath. There were so many ways to die here.
I wasn’t ready. Clothes bag zippers still bother me to this day, as I remember that body bag being unzipped. A young man was alive…then he was gone. He just doesn’t come back. We couldn’t save them all.
Two weeks later I boarded the last chopper in a hasty exit. I see three heavy laden radio operators and way too many guys. We were definitely pushing the weight limits of this chopper. The pilot eased through the triple canopy trees. The blades incessantly brushed the tree branches. Choppers usually move forward to increase their lift. This pilot navigated a forced straight up.
I saw what looked like a torque needle buried deep in the red. We couldn’t go up; we couldn’t go down. The pilot found some lift to ascend inches at a time. There was nothing more than pilot experience keeping this ship aloft.
The image of my deceased friend returned to me. I tried to keep my mouth shut. I would try not to scream…if we didn’t make it. It was stupid thoughts. No one would ever know if I bit my tongue. Dead is dead. A mortician does his best, when The Grim Reaper wins.
The chopper cleared the final canopy, lumbering forward like a whale almost beached. We needed altitude to avoid small arms fire from any number of directions. Slowly, surely the pilot guided us up to cruise altitude. My body relaxed, but my head kept swirling in a canopy of dark memories.
It was hard avoiding thoughts that I could return home soon, flying at amazing altitudes toward a peaceful place, where friends don’t die daily, to a place where it is safe to think. But for now, I need to concentrate, doing the things that brought me to this day, where I am still alive, still breathing.
Currahhees…we finally left with a duffle bag full of bad memories. The unprocessed load takes a lifetime of unpacking.

I pray for you everyday for healing. That in the darkest of times you will remember that it was not in vain and that you are not alone..God bless all of you..
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As always Al a great story.I feel I’ve gotten to know you pretty well thru them.No one could ever convince me that a combat medic didn’t have the hardest job in the Army.In the heat of the battle you would have to deal with all that pain and suffering we would be doing our job and not paying attention to the misery you were dealing with.The war never stopped it just kept rolling along.When your a young kid like you and I both were you have to become a hard ass as a means of survival .Thanks great write,Ron Ford
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Have grown to love my Currahees even more after the war. Unpacking our memories is a sacred task.
Sometimes the medics looked detached…for most it was appearance. Only God can spare a life. But sometimes we were His instruments. The losses were are personal. The more you knew about a soldier…the emotions got in the way of doing the life saving techniques.
Being a medic was a sacred calling. It was my first major identity. It was hard to let go of all that by returning to civilian life. It was a distinct military experience.
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Your comments reveal much about you Ron. I will try to wrap up this journey hurriedly for the Veteran’s Writer’s Workshop starting this Thursday. Will spend a week rolling out a revised/edited format of four months work.
Our Story must be told. We who survived must remember. Glad to be an active Currahee again.
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I will tell the story, when I can, of when I was called to identify some remains. They were all they could find. It still makes me sick, so I can’t tell it yet. What will it mean when I can?
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Trust these posts bring closure Sir. It is amazing what we remember as we have ‘group’ conversations. Everyone has so much to contribute.
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Safe to say that every currahee that returned has that one memory seared in their mind never to leave
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Very true my friend.
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I read this again tonight and it still took my breath away. Thank you for sharing some of your life experiences of your time in Vietnam. You make it so much more than story telling by adding your thoughts and feelings in each posts that you write. You make it real. God bless.
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Have one more that might be compelling if I can get it right.
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Sounds good…
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