I arrived
early for my appointment. As I walked through the front door, I thought
maybe today would be a short day. It was 8:30 A.M. I was surprised to
find there were at least 10 people sitting in the waiting room.
Methodically one by one the nurse appeared and called a name. Someone
would stand and follow her to get weighed and their vitals taken.
Then they
returned to their seat as she walked past the line of doors and dropped
a folder outside one of the doors. Over and over it was repeated as she
returned to her room and appeared, holding a folder and calling another
name. The look on her face stayed the same. Almost like the order she
continued to call names, deposit folders, and return to her room only to
appear again. I wondered if she even looked at their faces, or did they
just remain names. Another name that she could cross off of her list for
the day.
I looked
around at the people who shared this room with me. An old man in his
80's was sitting across from me. I saw him when I entered the building.
He was standing in the hallway staring into a picture of a war scene
that hung on the wall. He didn’t move when I passed. I don’t think he
even heard me or knew I was there. I must have been seated a half hour
before I looked up to see the elderly man appear. He was walking with a
cane and moving very slowly. I wondered if it took him all that time to
get here, or if he couldn’t tear himself away from the images in the
painting? Were they the same images he held in his mind after all these
years?
He sat in his
chair, holding onto his cane as if it was a part of him. I wondered how
many years his fingers grasped that worn piece of wood that steadied
him. He never removed his overcoat. His eyes scanned the room. His hands
shook, more like a tremor, but he didn’t seem to even notice or care.
His eyes met mine and I smiled at him. His expression remained the same,
but his hand seemed to wave to me. His eyes moved onto another person.
Again his expression remained the same. Then I realized that his hand
continued to move as in a wave, his lips forming silent words. His hands
moved with the unspoken words. I don’t think his eyes ever met mine. I
don’t know if he ever noticed anyone as his eyes scanned the room.
His doctor
appeared and said his name. Still, there was no movement. The doctor
touched his arm and he willingly followed him, slowly. As he left, I
looked into his eyes. His eyes held an almost total emptiness, as if
they had stopped seeing many years ago. All I could see was a look of
far away. I thought as he left, he reminded me of a robot. Somewhere he
found the strength to keep moving through life but not really living.
His eyes were looking but not seeing. His body in this room but he lived
somewhere in the past.
As each one
returned to their seat, they all reminded me of programmed robots.
Sometimes their seat was already taken by another. Nobody sat beside me.
I almost wanted to laugh and say, "Hey I don’t bite." I just remained
silent. One man had no other chair so he grabbed the back of the chair
beside me and yanked it over about a foot and sat down. I could hear him
murmuring to himself. Once I thought he was talking to me and I looked
at him. His eyes were expressionless. He wasn’t talking to me, and he
wasn’t seeing me. Another thousand yard stare.
I looked
around the room. I paused to look at each face. A thin man with a pony
tail, probably about my age, was wearing a leather jacket that said
SCOUT. Under it were the words, Vietnam. He talked nonstop yet nobody
seemed to be listening, or at least they didn’t acknowledge it. He sat
for a few minutes talking and then walked around the room only to return
to his seat and start talking again.
Beside him
was another man about the same age. Clean shaven, handsome, and dressed
so much different from the man beside him. My eyes moved to look at his
eyes. They were so big, almost frozen like when you have been scared
nearly to death and staring straight ahead. He didn’t even acknowledge
the words from the man in the biker jacket. He sat there waiting for the
expressionless nurse to call his name. While he waited, he must have
been visiting another place because his big round eyes made no contact
with anyone in the room. He was starring, but not seeing.
Another man
was reading a book that he brought. I think he was just covering his
face to shut out his surroundings. His hat lay beside me in an empty
chair, it was covered with pins. I recognized the crossed rifles of the
infantry. I recognized the pins that all Vietnam Vets wore. No reason to
move the hat, nobody wanted to sit there anyhow.
A heavy set
man appeared. I looked at him and he smiled. He sat beside the only
other woman in the room. My only impression of him was that he was
talkative. He started a conversation with the lady. I looked at her. She
appeared uncomfortable. She returned his questions with one word
answers, trying to turn away, like she didn’t want him to ask another
question. After a while he seemed to give up. Then he looked at her and
said, "Did you serve?" She said, "Yes, Navy." He said "Welcome Home."
There was only a nod in return and then her eyes also seemed to cloud
over and take her to another place and another time. The man stood up
and said he was going for a smoke, the first of many.
I didn’t want
to look around anymore. I didn’t want to see eyes that didn’t see and
people that were there but they weren’t there. I had seen it all before.
I see it many times in the darkness of night.
As I sat
there, I wondered if they knew I never walked on foreign soil. Never
served my country. Never held my buddy while he drew his last breath, or
seen more hell than anyone should ever have to witness. Did they know I
wasn't one of them, or think I wouldn't understand? Is that why they
chose not to sit beside me?
Then I asked
myself if they knew how I did serve my country. Did they know about
those who served in the aftermath? Did they know about the effects their
nightmares had on the one that stayed by their side? Even with his anger
raging, she stayed right there. She stayed right beside him in the
darkest of nights when he returned to the hell of War, in his
nightmares?
There was no
answer, just eyes that didn’t see and minds that were only half way
home. There were young men whose memories were of times not so long ago.
There were men my age who still lived partly in Vietnam with vivid
scenes forever flashing in their mind. Scenes that wouldn’t let them see
today. There were old men whose bodies were nearly worn out, yet the
scenes of long ago were so fresh in their mind; fresher than what
happened this morning.
You are not
so different from me, but you don’t know that. I am not your brother. I
didn’t walk where you walked, but I walk where you walk in your dreams.
I walk amongst the screams that are the result of the hell you are
witnessing as if it is now. Sometimes I am the enemy in your mind in
those darkest of nights because I am the only one there. The one you
think may kill you if you don’t kill me first, because I am perceived to
be the enemy when you can’t wake up from your nightmares.
I am the one
who refuses to give up because I know you are doing the best you can and
because I love you. No, not really, I am only representative of the one
who has loved you, stood by you, and refused to give up trying to bring
you home. I didn’t walk where you walked; I only walked in the
aftermath. Yet I am here for the same reason, to survive the nightmares
of my PTSD. I was the wife of a Vietnam Vet. Now I am a widow. An Agent
Orange widow.
Yes I held
one of your brothers in my arms and watched him draw his last breath.
His nightmares have gone, but mine remain. You are our heroes. You are a
special breed of men and women. We are a special breed too. We are the
Vietnam Wives. They call our illness second hand PTSD, but it doesn’t
feel second hand. It feels as real and scary as yours does.
You are Army,
Navy, Marines, and Air Force. You are proud. You are a brotherhood.
Sometimes we have nobody that understands what we have been through, but
even alone we know that we walked the walk. We didn’t walk your walk,
but we walked ours. We wouldn’t have changed a thing, because we love
you. We are the Vietnam Wives. We are struggling to survive, to
overcome, to keep on loving. Then we ask ourselves, why couldn’t our
love bring you completely home?
Today I will
see the same doctor you see. Today I will ask the same question you ask.
Why can’t I stop the nightmares? Then I will ask why my love was never
enough to bring your brother completely home. I tried so hard to make
him forget but I never could and now I can’t forget.
No, I am not
from any of the branches of the military, but I served. I was a Vietnam
Wife, and now I am an Agent Orange Widow. My husband served until he
drew his last breath. First he served beside you and then in his
nightmares. I will serve until I draw my last breath, because I cannot
forget. I will always be a Vietnam Wife.
I understand
that thousand yard stare much more than you think I do. I no longer have
my Vet. I wonder if you have any idea what you mean to me, and the
attachment I have to you. You were my husband’s brother. You are my
brother and I would like to be your sister. If you cannot understand
then just know that I was proud to be the Vietnam wife who loved your
brother.
Until I
finally draw my last breath and Heaven takes away the scenes of war’s
aftermath, I will remain a Vietnam Wife, and I am proud.
My attachment
to you is strong. My love and respect for you will never end. I hear you
say "Welcome Home" to each other. Only my God can welcome me home. I
never left my country, or did I? I think I did, last night in my
nightmares. That is where I served my country. I was not Army, Navy,
Marines, or Air Force. I served in a branch that my country never
recognized. I AM A VIETNAM WIFE.
© Mary Rogers
04/20/07

Awarded 6/8/2007


Awarded 5 June 2009