Uniforms 5

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CHAPTER 5
We went home, and I wasn’t the only one crying in his sleep.

I look back now, and I can see how many men were clearly suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, bur even as recently as the Eighties it was still a matter of being a big man, having the balls to ride it out. Some day I must work out what the suicide rate was for veterans of our nasty little war.

It left me with a real downer on politics. I had no grouse with why we had done it, the more I found out about the Argentine junta and their habits, the “dirty war” on their own people and the “Disappeared”, the more I knew we had done the right and necessary thing. God knows how I would have felt without that knowledge.

No, what gnawed at my soul was the fact that it had only been “necessary” because of the politicians, who all seemed to be running some odd fantasy game where they wanted to make the real world conform to their own odd perception of it.

Flash, flash, flash of weapons at night, like Hell’s own disco. Empty eyes, filled with rain.

It was a long voyage, and we used it to try and disengage from that automatic killing mindset. You have to. You come off something like Goose Green, or Tumbledown, and you go to a pub and somebody pisses you off, it really isn’t a great idea to just react. It’s one of the reasons we like our own pubs, without any hatters there, or civvies if we can help it. The paras even try and keep us out, but then our pubs are usually a couple of hundred miles apart. A bit like the old joke about how penguins avoid being eaten by polar bears.

I spent a lot of time at the rail, just staring. Stewie would usually bring me out a cuppa, or a can of crap beer, and we would stare out over an ocean empty but for our own ships, no more CAP, no strike aircraft boring in to try and blow us out of existence. He came straight to the point after three days or so.

“Are you queer, Mike? No, wait, it’s not a problem, and I haven’t talked to anyone else”

“Why do you ask, Stew?”

“I catch you looking at me every so often, when you think I’m not watching. You look all soppy when you do that”

“Do you want the truth, mate?”

He looked at me hard, silent for a minute.

“Yeah, if you know what it is”

“That’s just it, mate, I don’t know what it is. I don’t fancy men, certainly not to shag. Emma's exactly my type there, all legs and arse, and I could tell you things about her, but men do absolutely nothing for me. The idea of a cock just puts me right off. Fannies make me very happy”

And there was the truth, but not quite as Stewie would hear it. When I spoke of hating cocks and liking fannies, it was all rather more personal than I was really letting on. I meant my own, literally. Little Voice was becoming clearer day by day, and I was realising at last who the inner girl was, and she was as gay as a pack of fairy cakes. There was no way I could let that one out, though.

“Stewie, I can only say this once, so keep your trap shut till I finish. I love you. I don’t mean I fancy you, or want a shag, or want to stop shagging girls, but I care deeply for you. I spent the whole of our time down there scared shitless you would come back in a bag, and I would have died to prevent that. I don’t know what to call it, but it’s not like a brother, and it’s not like a lover, it’s just I am happier by your side than anywhere else.

“No, I’m not queer, I really can’t describe what I am, but that ugly little maggot you keep in your shreddies is safe from me. “

I paused, drew a deep breath.

“And now I will fully understand it if you tell me to fuck off.”

“Do not be so fucking stupid”

His hug nearly broke my ribs.

@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@

We sailed into the Solent surrounded by ships and boats of all sizes, horns blowing, flags waving. They meant well, but they weren’t there. Again, in later years, after I had discovered PTSD through my reading and my shrink, I came across “survivor guilt”, such an apt term. You wonder what you did to stay alive that someone else didn’t and the conclusion is that you must have held back somehow, not been as committed or brave as the dead were; that they deserved to have lived because they gave the sacrifice, and you must somehow not have been worth it.

I think every Falklands veteran must feel that way. I can’t speak for earlier wars, but I don’t see why they should be any different. Witnessing violent death is not something modern humans are very good at unless they are mentally ill in some way. I know I have referred to myself as insane, but not like that. Not like that.

I took a train up to Waterloo, then a tube to King’s Cross for the Intercity to Newcastle. Dad and Mam were waiting for me at Central Station and we had a very emotional reunion, even Dad’s eyes leaking, and before we went anywhere we walked round to the Station Hotel and I had my first pint of Scotch in ages. Dark, rich beer, so different to the Devon brews and far superior to what the Canberra had offered us.

Stewie had hugged me again as he went off home to the little place in Banbury his parents had, and we knew without speaking that we had a bond that was just that, beyond words. We had four weeks leave before heading back to Devon, and it took three of those weeks before I could feel at least slightly relaxed. I had to be careful down the pub, as described earlier. People I hardly knew would offer me drinks, pat me on the back, and I had to keep the instincts chained down. A loud noise would have me on my feet; my sleep was filled with those flashes, those empty eyes.

I got out as often as I could, out onto the hills with my rock boots soloing the sandstone outcrops as the Summer waned, curlews wailing over the moorland, and as soon as my leave was up I was back at the base. When I knocked at Emma’s door, some hairy answered it, and Emma purred “I needs my cock, my lover, and you was away so long”

Ah well.

I signed up for another few years. This was my family now, Mam and Dad and my brother not withstanding, but more importantly, these were the only people who understood, who could ever understand.

And Stewie was here.

Hatter: or Harry the Hat. or craphat. Any other beret colour than bottle green (Marine) or maroon (Para), or any other beret colour than the one you are wearing. Lesser form of life.

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Comments

Uniforms 5

Nice to see that lovely scene.

    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine
    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine

Thank You

This story is one of the best descriptions the emotions and feeling someone has when they have been in combat.

love needs to be unconditional

love needs to be unconditional

Listening to Bacarelle by Chopin didn't help

Andrea Lena's picture

And I held it together fairly well until this;

You wonder what you did to stay alive that someone else didn’t and the conclusion is that you must have held back somehow, not been as committed or brave as the dead were; that they deserved to have lived because they gave the sacrifice, and you must somehow not have been worth it.

As thoroughly and painfully a reminder of what survivor's guilt feels like. The PTSD isn't all about horror; some of it mixes in shame and guilt like you wrote above. Please consider putting this together when it is through and making it available as a teaching tool. I can't thank you enough. Those of us who deal with this know that it isn't only combat that produces these feelings, as I and others can attest, despite the assurances I received from my sister's therapist. It's good to be reminded, albeit however painful, that I'm not alone. Thank you!


Dio vi benedica tutti
Con grande amore e di affetto
Andrea Lena

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena

I wonder

This got me thinking (not an easy operation).

Witnessing violent death is not something modern humans are very good at unless they are mentally ill in some way.

It's true, I'm sure, but it implies humans in the past were better at coping with violent death and war in general. They did it because in many cases there was no alternative but I feel in my bones they suffered just as much as people do now. It's just that the suffering wasn't recognised and the 'stiff upper lip' was lauded. In the short term, people don't change. Evolution takes many, many thousands of years. Think how many were shot for cowardice in WW1 when they were suffering from 'shell-shock' (ie PTSD).

Most have always suffered mentally from experiencing extreme violence; it's just that there seem to be enough nutters around who appear to relish it and we all have to join in. I'm sure Mike is not alone though Melanie may be a rarer example.

Thoughtful stuff, thanks

Robi

Oh 'Drea

You put my thoughts into words.

Yes; this should be required reading for therapists - as should the story 'Shoes' by Heather Rose Brown.

It you haven't been there, you really have no idea what it's like - and that goes for anything you can name.

Susie

Thank you

Thank you all once again for the comments. I am going away for a few days this coming week, so the story will pause to draw breath.

This Chapter really Tears Me Up !

Dear Cyclist,

I feel ripped to rags reading this chapter. Bloody effective writing, really getting to the feelings inside. And thanks for starting to explain what some of the special terms mean.

Briar

Briar

Terms

See my reply to your earliier comment. I've put a link in.

I do believe that what Mike

I do believe that what Mike explained to Stewie is exactly what is said regarding people in a combat unit. You do not fight for your country (altho that is the accepted reason). You fit for the men and/or women in your particular little unit and to keep them alive. Mike and Stewie TRUST each other with their lives and that in and of itself is LOVE. I have a super close friend that I and he had not seen each other physcially for some twenty years, tho we stayed in touch via letters and phone. We both trusted each other with our lives, to the point of giving it if necessary, to protect the other.
When we did finally get the opportunity to meet once more, it was as if we had never been separated. My spouse and his spouse commented on this fact to the two of us. So I can fully understand Mike and Stevie and their feelings towards each other.

Thank you

That is the real gratification for any writer: being understood.