Re: Thanks to Sea and the unfortunate mess at Fort Hood,
by
Seasoldier
11/06/2009, 4:38 PM #
Well, I don't think you can thank me Gramps it was years ago that I passed through there with dad and family. Like you say, it was a three street town somewhere between Dallas and Austin right below Waco. Then there was Temple, Cooperscove and Belton Dam where I caught the biggest bass ever in my life on a lure. Fortunately I met some of the local business men who lived off the Camp, Post, Fort hood reservation. To me it seemed a kinky and odd arrangement where Killeen people went aboard base to high school.
It was here that a twelfth grader punched me on my arm and asked me, "What religion are you?" I replied that I didn't have a religion and he went on to say, "Well, get one by tomorrow." Hahahahahahaha
I recall laying on the living room floor doing my home work that night and glancing up at mom, who stood at the kitchen window dressed to the hilt wearing her white apron, black dress, stockings and hills. What a figure of a woman she was back then and is still.
I could not tell her what had happened on the bus for she would have whipped me with her favorite switch, which usually lay across the refrigerator, almost always drawing blood! You see, mom was more militant than dad was. She was almost unforgiving once her mitts gripped that switch. She would not tolerate listening to me complain about some 'bigger guy' picking on me for she and grandpa, from her side, had trained me to never give up and to fight. So I remained silent with that unanswered question buried deep inside. Later, way later, after Viet Nam I came back to examine religion and I'm glad that I did.
Dad was always pushing professionalism and mom wanted someone to work the ranch her younger brothers took care of. Little ole me was torn between the two.
Yes Gramps, I too, had the same 'gung ho' attitude and joined the Marines before Viet Nam. In fact, we were traversing Cuban waters thinking we were going to land and end that communist regime. On week-ends I spent extra time running up the fire break South of Camp Las Pulgas on Camp Pendleton. Then I got ready and went into Oceanside, or San Clemente where I would meet up with my fire team for a movie or a walk on the pier. No one pushed me into the Corps, and I too, expected my officers were on the ball, and I even wrote LBJ thanking him for allowing me to be among the first combat Marines to serve in Viet Nam. I got a reply in post card format thinking me as we pushed across the Pacific on the back of the USS Valley Forge.
Between my military family upbringing and my military experience you would expect me to be so patriotic that not one terse word would leave my mouth, and really I don't have to say a thing as you see it unfolding before your eyes, do I? There is a time to be stupid and at some time down the road a time to question. I always served my country never asking "why" just as dad had taught me. His favorite saying was, "Do the job first then bitch." I did my job not once but twice, and now I should be able to bitch thank you.
Seasoldier/