A year ago today ... Debbie was miserable, and my life was just a tad more complicated that it is right now.
Debbie had shattered her left knee joint and right kneecap just a few days before. She'd just come out of surgery to reconstruct the knee's socket and had been admitted to the TCU (Transitional Care Unit) at Logan Regional Hospital. She was in considerable pain, and both legs were strapped into braces that locked them straight. We hadn't learned of her osteoporosis yet, but we knew that something must be wrong with her bones.
My mom had just arrived at the nursing home in Logan, and was giddy with happiness at having done so. We had no idea, at that moment, that she had just ten days or so to live. All we knew was that she was here, bubbling over with the joy of being here, seeing my brother Scott and I, and meeting some of the Utahans she'd been hearing about. Scott and I were very busy getting her room outfitted. The only concern we really had was that her mental state seemed out of character and almost unreasonably happy, and we didn't have any idea why.
I had just picked up our two new field spaniel puppies,
Cabo and Mako. The two of them were quite a handful – bundles of
non-house-trained energy and joy. They were a lot of work for
both me and Michelle H. (who pitched in to help on many occasions for a
few weeks starting late May last year). I have trouble imagining how I could possibly have coped with Debbie's injury, mom's arrival, and the puppies' arrival without Michelle's help. She was the good friend we could count on, going out of her way to check on me, calling every day to coordinate where I needed help with the chaos, and always, always cheering me on. Despite being a lot of work, the puppies were also a source of peace
and happiness for me. Amid the chaos of my life, I could count on them
to bring a smile and calm me down.
By comparison things seem downright placid today... :)
Monday, May 29, 2017
Remembering...
Remembering... I woke this morning around 4 am, realized that today was Memorial Day, and started thinking about Luke, Dave, and Bill – the three people I knew who were killed in Vietnam. For some reason Dave is the one who was foremost in my thoughts. I knew him while attending “C” school for Data Systems Technicians (DS rating) at the Mare Island Navy base, near Vallejo, California in 1972. Dave was a big, friendly, bear of a guy, from Nebraska if I remember correctly. He entered the Navy without much in the way of math skills, and zero prior knowledge of electricity or electronics. He'd struggled mightily to get through “BEEP” (basic electronics) school in San Diego, and was struggling harder in DS school. After a few months, he was booted out of DS school – he just couldn't keep up with the pace. At that time, students booted out of DS school were sent to the PBR (Patrol Boat, River) school, also at Mare Island. There Dave excelled, as we heard when he proudly came to see his DS friends after graduating – and just before deploying to Vietnam. He was in Vietnam for just a couple of months when he was killed by sniper fire from the shores of a river whose name I've long since forgotten. I didn't learn of his death until after I'd deployed to the USS Long Beach (CGN-9), when I came across an article about the incident in which he and another crew member were killed. His photo was there, and caught my eye.
Within the Navy, the PBRs in Vietnam were notorious for their high casualty rate (casualty, to the military, is both deaths and injuries). Depending on what source you find, the casualty rate was between 5% and 8% of the crews per month. At a 6%/month rate, if you served on a PBR crew for a year, you had more than a 50% chance of being a casualty. By comparison the four years I served on the USS Long Beach were effectively risk-free.
I didn't know Dave all that well, but nevertheless well enough to know that he had no well-formed rationale to support risking his life in Vietnam. He'd have simply seen it as his duty, once he'd signed up to serve his country. I remember Dave as one of the few young men willing to say he saw signing up for the Navy as his patriotic duty. At the time ('71), the country was being rocked by antiwar protests, and many – perhaps most – young people perceived military people as despicable “baby killers”, and someone unabashedly patriotic, like Dave, really stood out.
I shed some tears for you today, Dave, and I'll be thinking of you all day...
Within the Navy, the PBRs in Vietnam were notorious for their high casualty rate (casualty, to the military, is both deaths and injuries). Depending on what source you find, the casualty rate was between 5% and 8% of the crews per month. At a 6%/month rate, if you served on a PBR crew for a year, you had more than a 50% chance of being a casualty. By comparison the four years I served on the USS Long Beach were effectively risk-free.
I didn't know Dave all that well, but nevertheless well enough to know that he had no well-formed rationale to support risking his life in Vietnam. He'd have simply seen it as his duty, once he'd signed up to serve his country. I remember Dave as one of the few young men willing to say he saw signing up for the Navy as his patriotic duty. At the time ('71), the country was being rocked by antiwar protests, and many – perhaps most – young people perceived military people as despicable “baby killers”, and someone unabashedly patriotic, like Dave, really stood out.
I shed some tears for you today, Dave, and I'll be thinking of you all day...