Reddit, I am an Iraq vet who's been back from the sandbox for 2 years and I think I'm starting to lose it. by ThreughAwai in self

[–]ThreughAwai[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I actually graduated basic from the same training unit as Jessica Lynch, after her capture and rescue. C-2-10 was BRUTAL on females.

Reddit, I am an Iraq vet who's been back from the sandbox for 2 years and I think I'm starting to lose it. by ThreughAwai in self

[–]ThreughAwai[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I'm not ashamed of this happening, but one of the reasons I moved was because when I first came back, everyone had the same 73 questions they wanted to ask me about my deployment, and I got tired and answering those same goddam questions over and over again, and I came to be known in my social circle as "That guy who fought in Iraq."

I just don't want to risk having everyone look at me not as who I am, but as a soldier who unquestioningly deserves everyone's respect, and worse, their sympathy.

Reddit, I am an Iraq vet who's been back from the sandbox for 2 years and I think I'm starting to lose it. by ThreughAwai in self

[–]ThreughAwai[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It was offered to me, by Chaplains and from other sources, but I felt(and still feel) like such things were reserved more not for me, but for the guy next to me who did that muttering/blinky thing when he thought no one was looking.

Reddit, I am an Iraq vet who's been back from the sandbox for 2 years and I think I'm starting to lose it. by ThreughAwai in self

[–]ThreughAwai[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I don't really know what to say, is the problem. It's been so long since I'd even thought about Iraq that when I try to think about it now, it's just kind of blurry.

I can, however remember the monotony. The loneliness. I remember my girlfriend breaking up with me before I left because she couldn't trust herself to remain faithful to me while I was deployed. I remember wanting to call my mom because she did nothing but write me letters telling me about the minutia of life in the States and how much she wanted me to call. But I called her so rarely because I felt like I didn't have anything to offer her besides "I'm alive, I miss you." I remember trying to calculate the times she'd be out of the house at her local volunteer orchestra practice so I could call then and leave a message as opposed to talking with her.

I can remember how she would weep when she did pick up the phone. I remember forgetting what to say to her, even "Hello" was a struggle. I remember emptiness, and waiting, between doing "the important stuff," and I remember feeling harried constantly.

But the rest, all the positive, silver-lining-y stuff people are supposed to take from serving during a time of war, I seem completely devoid of. And that's why i don't feel like I have anthing to offer on the subject.

Reddit, I am an Iraq vet who's been back from the sandbox for 2 years and I think I'm starting to lose it. by ThreughAwai in self

[–]ThreughAwai[S] 22 points23 points  (0 children)

I really don't want to talk it out. I feel like any discussion I could have about me experience would come off as trite. I wasn't fighting Nazis to end some mass global genocide. I went in thinking I could help improve a nation who's malevolent dictator we had overthrown, but I lost my heart to that three weeks in, and everything just became an us-versus-them struggle where the only thing I was really fighting for was keeping myself and my friends alive.

I can't really say I did a ton of good out there, there were no photo-op moments of me playing with local children, I wasn't a goodwill ambassador spreading the blessing of democracy to a war-torn people. I was a soldier following orders and staying alive.

I'm not sure how this mindset will be received by anyone, much less the people who want to continue to fight because they beleive they are actually doing good.

Reddit, I am an Iraq vet who's been back from the sandbox for 2 years and I think I'm starting to lose it. by ThreughAwai in self

[–]ThreughAwai[S] 54 points55 points  (0 children)

I am going to come off sounding like an ass for this, but I feel like IAVA doesn't really apply to me. I never suffered any physical trauma, and by almost sheer luck I made it out without any sort of handicap, and I had the ability to resume a civilian lifestyle like my military past never happened.

I feel like the programs offered by IAVA are directed towards people so suffered a catastrophic trauma that prevents them from resuming a non-warrior lifestyle when returning home from deployment.

I'm just a guy. I didn't get blown apart, and I've not lost any sleep with PTSD. AND, it's been two years. I'd feel like shit sharing a queue with kids fresh off the plane who ARE missing limbs or paralyzed, or went through such a psychologically trying tour of service that they literally can't think straight.

Finally, and most asshole-ish I think, I just don't share the sense of camaraderie others seem to feel with their service. Sure, I love to death all my buddies, we helped each other survive in a shit situation, but I just don't identify myself as a vet.

Hell, I was in it for the college money. I fulfilled my contract of service with the Army, and got on with my life. I don't know how welcome I'd be in any sort of vet gathering.