Originally Posted by TexSpecial:
I don't think there is anything wrong with forum members or the public in general, also taking time to thank any and all Veterans, past and present, for their service and sacrifices. In fact there is nothing wrong with honoring veterans every day of the year. I might be a bit biased, when I returned from duty in Vietnam myself and fellow veterans were shunned. It is nice to receive gratitude now. God bless fellow veterans.
You stated it exceptionally well, TexSpecial! I, too, was a party to how we were treated when we returned from Vietnam, and have never really forgotten or forgiven. However, I value this day and every day as a time to thank all veterans--living and dead--for what they were, and still are, willing to sacrifice for their country.
I just returned from viewing our local (Poland, OH) Memorial Day parade and ceremony. I have made this an annual tradition since moving back to the area. It's a typical small town affair, with crowds lining the flag-adorned sidewalks through scenic downtown Poland to watch veterans of all conflicts since WWII, the high school band, and groups of youngsters still too young and innocent to know the horror of war, march proudly through town.
Here's what a prominent psychiatrist wrote (in part), about what war does to the human mind:
"No one who goes to war ever comes home – not in the emotional, psychological sense. No one. Some make it back, mostly—which is an amazing and happy fact. Most make it back far less—which is fully expected but still not acknowledged as widely as it must be. And some return only physically, and are forever unrecognizable psychologically.
"This is the unspoken risk our warriors take when they leave us to fight. We worry over their legs and their eyes, but we still don’t fully grasp the peril in which they place their psyches and their souls.
"That men and women take these risks, and willingly, is nothing short of miraculous. This is why, on Memorial Day – and every day – we should remember all fighting men and women, thank them and thank God for them."