30 September 2007

Pour toi mon amour - Prevert

Je suis allé au marché aux oiseaux
Et j'ai acheté des oiseaux
Pour toi
mon amour
Je suis allé au marché aux fleurs
Et j'ai acheté des fleurs
Pour toi
mon amour
Je suis allé au marché à la ferraille
Et j'ai acheté des chaînes
De lourdes chaînes
Pour toi
mon amour
Et je suis allé au marché aux esclaves
Et je t'ai cherchée
Mais je ne t'ai pas trouvée
mon amour

26 September 2007

at what cost?

-Why did you volunteer?
-Better me than someone that didn't want to be there.
-That's the best answer I've heard.

Even though I did end up at Walter Reed and didn't come home with everyone else, I still think I made the right choice. That I picked the right plane. That I gave it my all, that I did my best. I am not ashamed of being here -- I'm ashamed of what happened. But there's not much I can do about that now.

Sometimes I wonder if I would have stayed as long as I did if my sergeant had paid attention actually did something, anything. In retrospect, it was Sergeant Major that was trying to throw me a line, trying to help me. Always asking "Techno, what's wrong? Do you want to go home?" But it was not about going home. It was never about going home.

I wanted to stay. I almost made it. But at what cost?

20 September 2007

being a good friend

I watched him have (what I think was) a manic episode last night.

Music pumping, he's bobbing around the kitchenette between cooking dinner and talking to himself. Out loud. Almost as if he was holding a one-sided conversation.

Later, he's playing a driving game on Xbox. Nothing about that is out of the ordinary -- he plays while laying in bed every night. Only he's standing on the bed, an unlit cigarette hanging out of his mouth, and yelling and pointing at the TV.

His thoughts are racing, his pupils are dilated, he's full of energy, he doesn't want to calm down. It's a rush.

After he pops some pills, as he's finally coming down, he slows... and shakes.

The next day he says that he doesn't think what happened was a problem; that it was controlled. It was barely controlled. I was waiting for the seams to burst.

Honestly, I was afraid. I wanted him to go to the ER. But no, there's no problem here, we don't need to go to the ER.

When I reported it to his Point of Contact, I was shaking. Anxious. I wouldn't have told her if I wasn't concerned about him. He needs to get well but he doesn't think there's a problem at all.
The tech thanked me, told me that he is lucky to have a friend who is so concerned.

I left wondering if my actions would put him back in the inpatient ward. Even so, he might just get the help he needs.

he's been inside the wire for too long

-Why aren't there any Burger Kings around here?
-I don't know. Haven't seen one yet.
-Oh wait! There's one on the FOB.
-*moment of silence*
-Did I just say FOB?
-Yeah, yeah, you did. Walter Reed is not a FOB. Walter Reed is not a f&%@ing FOB.

16 September 2007

keeping in touch

I am going to take a bus to see Wolf. It's been so long.

Fuzz is complaining that I still haven't seen Nephew. He asked me if friends come before family. I don't think he'll ever understand.

Ky is back to three days off a week, the lucky guy. I'm glad that he's doing much better.

No word from Aramis. He doesn't know how upset it makes me. He also doesn't know the real reason why I was medevac'd. (I think I've stopped caring.)

Driver was busted for pot, two miles from home. If he had gone to Europe, would that have happened?

I may have not seen combat, but...

Wednesday I start to go downhill again.

Thursday was a day of freedom from the ward to sit through a ceremony doped up on anti-anxiety pills.

Friday the doctor asks if I want to go back to the inpatient ward. They begin to wonder if there is a PTSD component to all of this.

Well, duh.

this is your brain

On the right is your brain.

On the left is your brain on war.

Any questions?

13 September 2007

stop it

-Stop it.
-Stop what?
-Scanning the metro car. Stop it.
-I can't help it.
-What are you looking for?
-Anything suspicious. Anything that doesn't belong.
-This isn't Iraq. We're safe here.
-*shakes head*

He nodded off on the way back, only to slip into a flashback.

10 September 2007

our reality

Is it easier to accept a Wounded Warrior as one that is visibly wounded than those of us whose wounds can't be seen?

Is it easier to offer help to someone in a wheelchair compared to helping someone who is having a flashback?

Is it easier to understand the frustration of new limitations than fears of everyday things?

What will you do when we jump into the bushes when we hear fireworks? When we can't sit still, relax, let our guard down? When we say we can't go out tonight because we're afraid that it'll be too crowded? When we wake up in the middle of the night screaming?

This is our reality. Can you accept it?

08 September 2007

panic attack

-I got you Techno, I got you. It's okay, it's okay. Breathe. Deep breaths. That's it. Where are you?
-My room.
-Who else is here?
-You.
-How do you feel?
-(no response)
-Techno, how do you feel?
-Terrified.

05 September 2007

not the same person

I'm feeling a bit better. The shaking is mostly gone -- I can hold my camera steady again. I don't sway side-to-side and I'm not walking through the hallways afraid that I'm going to faint. Small things, but important.

They keep asking me if I feel like the medication is working. I have no answer for them. I take my medication like I'm supposed to, but how can I tell if it's working or not? A pill or two may make my brain behave or even help me sleep, but there's no pill to take the guilt and anger away, to make me stop missing my friends, to make me feel normal again. How do you answer a question like that?

All I know is that I am definitely not the same person that got on that plane.

03 September 2007

feel so detached

I had a dream the other night that I was being MEDEVAC'd again. Only instead of going from Germany to Walter Reed, I was going in the opposite direction. Across the ocean, closer to the desert that had been home for so many months.

This doesn't feel real. The hospital, the daily meetings with doctors, the pills -- none of it. I think a part of me is still expecting to wake up in my tiny space etched out of the beehive of a barracks we were living in. When I look outside, it isn't a barren landscape of sand, scrub, Army-issue tents and drab buildings that greets me. Outside is green green grass, tall thick trees, and gray squirrels darting back and forth.

If this is what I had been missing so much, why do I feel so detached?

01 September 2007

not a perfect world


A real friend is someone who walks with you to the hospital in the middle of the night just to make sure you're okay, without knowing what is wrong.

Not many people can do that.

Not many people have to do that.

No one should have to do that.

But this isn't exactly a perfect world.

(Thank you, even though it has taken me far away from you now.)

leaving them behind

The hardest thing about leaving the desert was leaving the guys behind. Although the reality of it was they were already gone in one sense or another. That happens when the Army dictates where you're going to work, when you're going to work, and what's involved in that job. Your life is in someone else's hands. Just a part of life out there. A part I don't miss much.

I think of them often, regardless of where they are now. Is Driver still having nightmares of his convoy being attacked and his friends killed by insurgents? Will his driving in the States be rather eventless? Has the base where Aramis is stationed been mortared lately? Can he sleep with the jets taking off constantly? Who has Ky's back now? Who is going to be his shoulder to lean on? Do they even think of me?

It's funny how three flights and three weeks changes your world completely. This wasn't the way it was supposed to be, but it's for the best.

Here's the question that bothers me the most: is it harder to be seperated but in the same time zone as Wolf and my mom or to be an ocean away from Ky and Aramis?

I'm still trying to figure that one out.