Category Archives: Family

Writings about family: reflections, reminiscences, original letters, etc.

Seven years on…

It was seven years ago today that my unit began the convoy north from Kuwait into to our base north of Tikrit. It was not a great experience, but if I’m honest with myself I have to admit that I felt a certain sense of adventure over the subsequent three days. Perhaps that was what kept the fear away. (I really don’t remember feeling afraid in Iraq, though now I realize that was because it was buried too deep.) It turned out to be a relatively uneventful trip, at least for my serial in the convoy. One truck in another serial killed a person and wounded two others in a car that tried to get past the convoy, which was what we were trained to do (suicide bombers being a threat). Another serial had an IED go off shortly after it passed an  intersection. For us, it was simply a long, long drive in a completely foreign landscape.

As with most “anniversary” dates, today & the next couple of days are a challenge for me. I wish I could shut off the memory spigot, but that’s not really possible. There have been periods when I’ve not consciously realized that “on this day X happened.” The subconscious mind doesn’t forget, though, so I’ll begin having more intrusive thoughts, be more irritable than usual, feel the anger surge up again, and start isolating myself more often. When I realize what’s happening, I can start managing all the effects, so it’s probably for the best that I keep these periods in my consciousness. Still, I wish, really wish, that I could simply forget it all.

That’s not entirely true, though. Yes, I wish that these memories would stop haunting me, and that the difficult emotions that have become so much a part of them would simply dissipate. I don’t enjoy living with PTSD. Yet, it is who I am, now and most likely for the rest of my life. If I could somehow take a pill and make it all go away, I would have to re-create myself again. Over the past six years (it was also around this time, one year after going into Iraq, that I was diagnosed with PTSD), I’ve had to travel down another long, long road in foreign territory, although this one has been internal. I’ve had to re-collect the pieces of who I was before Iraq, sort those parts that were still “me” from those that were no longer. I’ve had to put those pieces back into something of a functional human being–once something is broken into pieces, it can never be made whole again. The best outcome is building something new out of what’s left. The person I am now is who I am now, not who I wish I was, nor the person I used to be. I can’t erase Iraq from my life, but even if I could exorcise it from my mind & heart, I would still be made up of the pieces that were left.

Another year, then, passes by, and another reminder of a short but intense & painful period in my life. Still, I am here, have a loving & supportive family, work to keep me busy (if uninspired), and a mind and heart with which to ponder deep things. I am not wise, nor believe that I ever will be; and my life speaks to fact that I’m not all that smart. But all of that won’t matter if, after having been a part of that which was so wrong, I can live my life simply being good. That’s enough.

End of January

This week was exam week–midyears and semester finals. The tests are done, the grading is under way, and somewhere over the next two days I get to put together my two second-semester classes. It’s almost as if someone sat down and asked, “how can we come up with a way to stress both students and teachers as much as possible?”

On the other hand, the school year is half-over.

The crazy winter weather continues, as in no winter weather. It’s been raining for nearly twenty hours; as a colleague pointed out today, if it were ten degrees colder we’d be buried. Mild temperatures continue for the next week, which puts us into February. Chances are it’s going to be a mostly snowless winter. Makes one very suspicious about climate change.

Anne & I are going to talk with a writer tomorrow; she’s been working on a book about returning veterans and their families. She interviewed us a few years ago, but has decided to include the issue of PTSD and its long-term effects. Neither Anne nor I have spoken about this with anyone bur ourselves for going on three years, so it’ll be an interesting exercise. Since then, I know Anne’s thought a lot about the secondary effects that my PTSD has had on her and the family. For that matter, I have, too. Recently, I’ve been trying harder to communicate to those around me where I’m at. I feel like I plateaued a little over a year ago; its not getting any worse, though not really any better. I’ve learned to manage the worst effects, so don’t have to struggle to keep the anger, anxiety, hyper-vigilance, etc. under control; however, that’s not the same as being free of it all. The self-care I’ve learned requires that I do certain things, and not do others. Those people who have to live & work around me, have to put up with me, need to have at least some idea of what’s going on so they don’t mistake my behaviors for anything other than what they are. For example, several times a day I really need to be in a quiet place by myself. Keeping all the effects managed takes a lot of energy, physical and emotional; if I don’t have time to relax a little, I become over-tired, more stressed, and less able to manage it all. It’s easy to assume that I’m alienating myself, upset with others, avoiding people, and so on, when in fact I simply need some space.

It’s not easy to talk about these things, of course. Not only is my inner life private, like everyone’s; it also leads to feeling vulnerable, which is a trigger for all sorts of reactions. I really dislike opening up like this. But, it helps others, especially those close to me, understand what’s up. So, I’m chalking it up to just one more of the unpleasant elements of living with PTSD.

January slump

I haven’t been writing much lately, in my blogs, journals, or anything else. About the only writing I’ve been doing is on student papers, school-related e-mails, and a sentence-or-two on Facebook. It’s been a long time since I was in the habit of writing at all, and that was while I was in Iraq. Maybe there’s some subconscious negative-association-thing going on.

I spent the weekend of the 14th in Philadelphia with a wonderful group of young women & men discussing the future of Warrior Writers. This organization hosts workshops & retreats for veterans to explore in writing their military experience. The focus is primarily on those who have served since 9-11, especially those who served in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. The purpose is primarily to add to veterans’ healing by giving them a written voice. A secondary but no less important purpose of Warrior Writers is to let those voices be heard. Pindar (and Desidarius Erasmus) observed that “war is sweet to those who know it not.” Hearing the words of the men & women who know it first hand cannot help but strip away the mask that hides war’s ugliness and horror.

On Saturday we held a release party for the third anthology of Warrior Writers work: After Action Review. Several of the veterans whose works are in the anthology were there and gave readings; it was an amazing and emotional experience–and I seldom resort to superlatives. I was proud to be in the same room as these young folk. Their works speak with more power than those of “professional” writers and poets because theirs come from not only the heart but the soul. And their willingness to share their struggles and pain speaks even more to their commitment to being voices for their still-silent comrades-in-arms. I can promise those who pick up these anthologies that they will be often disturbed but always moved.

This week (that of the 23rd) I haven’t been feeling well. Anne thinks I picked up the bug that is going around school, and she may well be right. But at least some of this is the “crud” that I’ve been carrying around since Iraq. Sweats, chills, whole-body pain, nausea–it’s all there. I had another flare-up in December, but there’s no real pattern so it’s no surprise that it came back so soon. Sometimes I can go a couple of months without symptoms, other times it’s an up-and-down cycle for several months. I’ve not been able to identify any single triggers, though I think stress plays a role, along with air quality and temperature. No doctor in the VA or in civilian world has been able to narrow it down to anything known; it’s just a collection of symptoms that recur again & again. I’ve accepted that it’s an ongoing part of life, but I still don’t like it.

January is in itself a stressor, & not just because of the end of first semester at school. It was seven years ago this Saturday, the 28th, that my unit began the convoy from Kuwait to Summerall. Even when I don’t think about it, the trip and events that followed seem to bubble up from my subconscious, making me feel tense, stressed, anxious. When I bring it all to the conscious level, I can manage it; but doing so takes energy, energy that I would otherwise use in my daily life. In other words, it’s just a crappy time. August is the big one, of course, November being the other anniversary that affects me. Just like with the physical “crud,” I’ve accepted that it’s going to be like this.

Maybe some of the slump has to do with the weather. Hardly any snow this year! It just ain’t natural. Although snow creates many problems, I still love snowstorms. It’s all the “blanketing the earth in whiteness” stuff. Snowstorms always lift my spirits, if only for a day or so. This year, though, it looks like that’s not going to be an option. We’ve only had two wimpy little snowfalls, hardly worth the effort of getting out a shovel. But then, the winter isn’t over. Maybe the weather patterns will shift for February.

And, January is nearly over–a week from now it’ll be February. I’m choosing to believe that it will be a brighter month than this one.

Goodbye, Winnie

Yesterday the time finally came for me to take our pug Winston to the vet to be put to sleep. It was difficult, as these things always are, I suppose. I haven’t had much experience with this sort of thing. I’ve only done this myself one other time (family will remember Phantom, the black cat that lived with us for several years before moving in with Nana); growing up, it was Mom & Dad who handled such unpleasant tasks. This time it fell to me, and I decided to stay with the little guy up to the end. He’d lost a lot of his faculties & was confused most of the time. It seemed right that he have a friend there with him.

We had to move Mom back east with us in 2002. Her health was failing, and she wasn’t always tracking very well. I’d decided that Winston would have to come along because she was so attached to him, hoping too that he would help lift her spirits during such a major change. What I hadn’t realized was that over the previous several years, the dog had lost any discipline he’d had (which wasn’t much), including his housebroken-ness. It took us almost a year to get him to the point where he didn’t leave messes in the house. Moreover, he was used to being the alpha-male, doing pretty much what he wanted. He had to be kept on a leash because he’d always run off (including into traffic), and would snap at all of us if he didn’t get his way. THAT took over a year to rectify. (The Dog Whisperer wouldn’t have approved of my methods, but he eventually ceded the alpa position to me.) He began to mellow after that, but was never a dog that one could take on walks off the leash, or even behave well while on it. And that was the case up until the last.Of course, Winnie & I had a complex relationship. I only saw him a couple times at Nana’s before we moved to Massachusetts. He was just a pup then, and like all kids had too much energy for his own good. I remember asking Mom, “Why a pug?” While growing up, my grandmother (who lived with

us) had a little female pug, Mahla. She was sweet, but like most pugs snorted and snuffled a lot, and (honestly) was not all that bright. Pugs are a breed not noted for being all that sharp, and their prolonged puppyhood is just as annoying as endearing. But Mom saw him at the local animal shelter and fell for Winston right away. The rest is history.

That said, Winnie also had his unique charm. Being a pug, he was always enthusiastic & playful, so he was often a lot of fun. He loved playing fetch with his little cloth footballs (he got a new one every Christmas), and in his later years he like to sit close & be petted. Even when I’d get so pissed at him that I’d seriously ponder pugicide, he could look up with his big brown eyes and “huh?” expression (he was never very deep) and soften me up. And that’s probably how I’ll remember him. Mostly.

Anne & I began thinking that the end was approaching last winter. It was harder for him to get up and down the stairs, and he sleeping for increasingly long periods of time. He’d pretty much lost his hearing by then, and his eyesight was going. By late spring we had to carry him up & down the stairs to go out, and he was increasingly uncomfortable (his ears bothered him a lot). Over the summer he began having problems with his hips & hind leg, to the point where he couldn’t stand for more that a few seconds. By last month it became obvious that he was going downhill fast. I found a lump on his side, he lost control of his bowels, and finally was so uncomfortable that he had a hard time just laying still. It was time.
The vet was very kind. She gave him gas that made him sleep, then gave him the injection. It only took a minute. I brought him home, and Anne & Mary had prepared a place for him. We wrapped him up in Anne’s fluffy bathrobe & put him to rest.

I won’t miss many of his behaviors, but I’ll miss him. Rest easily, Winnie.

The leeward side of summer

Summer seems to be passing. I’ll spend most of next week at school on a video project for the district, and the following week brings the before-Labor-Day meetings and workshops. Two weeks from Tuesday a new school year begins. As is true of most years, I’m more-or-less ready for the change. While I enjoy summer’s down-time, I’m restless by the second week of August. Today it feels as if the year ahead is poised like a race-horse in the starting gate, barely contained energy awaiting the bell so it can leap into activity. It doesn’t really care what the jockey feels; he’s only (the horse thinks) along for the ride.

This will be a transition year in several ways. The most obvious will be Mary starting her freshman year at CCHS. Four years from now she will (most likely) be out of the house, off to college, and beginning her life independent from Mom & Dad. It’s exciting to watch her, but also a little bittersweet, Mary being our youngest. The nest isn’t empty yet, but I can feel it coming.

Mary’s graduation from high school will more than likely mark the end or near-end of my teaching career, at least public-high-school part. From the time I started teaching until a couple of years ago, I had always thought of myself as being in the classroom well into my mid-60s or beyond. I love being a class with a couple dozen teenagers, and I know I’ll miss it very much when I do leave. However, the combination of a problematic school environment with ongoing health issues (thank you, again, President Bush) make an earlier transition more likely. Of course, one can’t tell what lies ahead: things can change in ways that would keep me in the classroom, or push me out even earlier. Insofar as anyone can make plans, though (“life happens while we make plans”), the end appears in sight.

Anne will be starting back to school sometime this year, too. The circumstances that brought this about have been unpleasant, but I’m excited in anticipating the new directions that will open up to her over the next year. She’s always deserved better, and I see those days coming.

On a more mundane level, I should be able to realize some changes in at least two project I’ve been nurturing for a couple of years. The school yearbook program will, I hope, take on a completely different look, drawing more participation and enthusiasm from the students. Also, despite some unfortunate setbacks over the past six months, I think our TV production project will finally get off the ground (although it may be more like the Wright Brother’s first flight that a launch of the space mission).

Financially, the past two months have not gone well; but that, too, should eventually yield some benefits. I’m optimistic that the next six months will make the last three, if not worthwhile, at least acceptable. Assuming, of course, that our political & economic leaders don’t bring about a complete economic & social meltdown over the next year.

So, I think I’m ready for summer to pass. In more ways than I care to write about, what is in the past should remain just that: in the past. It is by looking forward that we progress, and it is by progressing that we grow. And that, I think, is what life is ultimately all about.

Finally feeling better–knock on wood!

I was sitting here at the computer thinking, “It feels like it’s been several weeks since I began feeling crummy.” Then I realized that it has been several weeks. It’s hard to tell, of course, whether or not this ‘condition’ is really going dormant for a while or if it’s simply re-energizing for another go. For now, though, I’ll be an optimist and believe the latter.

I started writing a piece about chronic illness which goes a little deeper into what I’ve been thinking regarding this ongoing cycle of feeling better/feeling worse. I’ll try to get that up in the next day or so. Suffice to say that I’ve been thinking about the tightrope walk between struggling against a chronic illness and finding a level of acceptance regarding the influence it has on one’s life. At least I have the luxury of having a quality-of-life threatening condition, not a life-threatening one.

So, today I cleaned up the kitchen, re-assembled our LARGE birdcage, which we’re going to use outdoors for our screechy little friends (my secret hope is that it will humble Terrance enough to lower the screech rate for a few days), and printed out the readings that I need to go over for my psychology coursework. Actually, in writing this I’m procrastinating on the latter, but I believe we all should practice our gifts (one of mine being procrastinating, in case that wasn’t clear).

Pollen!

Anne, Mary, and I spent the previous two days on the inside of hospitals. Mary had an allergic reaction, probably to tree pollen, Tuesday evening, so we made a flying trip to the Emerson emergency room. We’d given her Benedryl before we left, and the doctor there gave her more, plus some other antihistamines. A visit to Mary’s doctor today garnered us a prescription for an epi-pen, plus a referral to an allergist. My own suspicion is that her reaction was brought on by an overload of pollen; she and Anne had gone for a walk at Great Meadows a little earlier, and quite a few things were in bloom. Mary’s only had one prior reaction like this, over ten years ago, so I wonder the extent to which she allergic to a single type of pollen. Numerous blooming plants in a concentrated area could have overwhelmed her system. But, I’m an English teacher, no a doctor, so we’ll get her to an allergist & find out what’s going on.

Jamaica Plain VA Hospital

Yesterday was my turn, although it was a scheduled visit to the VA hospital. I have a hiatl hernia of the stomach/esophagus, and I want to see whether surgery might correct it. So yesterday was an endoscopic exam of my esophagus, stomach, and small intestine to see what’s what. Of course the first thing I did was to go to the wrong hospital, so when I finally figured out where I was supposed to be I got bumped back an hour. The whole procedure took two hours, which wasn’t bad for me since I was unconscious most of the time, but poor Anne & Mary had to spend their time in the waiting room. And, since it’s the VA, of course the TV has Fox on: my poor family.

I still have several projects that I have to get done in the next couple of days. Tomorrow morning is going to be devoted to getting the Yearbook taken care of–I need to get a mailing printed & out, and get the final supplement from last year done. After that, either tomorrow or Saturday, I have to finish the brake line on the Toyota. The Jetta goes into the shop next week to get the bumper fixed (someone hit it), so we’ll need the beater to get around. Once I get those done, then there are several other projects waiting, but we’ll take it one at a time.

More later.

Dear Dad:

Dear Dad:
I know it hasn’t been that long since I’ve talked to you, but as you know it’s been over 19 years since we actually had a face-to-face conversation. On this side of the veil it’s hard to hear responses. Today is Father’s Day, though, and I wanted to write a letter to you as I used to do years ago. I guess you already know all of this, but it still feels good to talk.

I miss our conversations, you know. Some of my most cherished memories are those of sitting at the kitchen table with you sharing a couple beers or glasses of wine & talking about politics, religion, our family, My Fair Lady, and pretty much anything that came to mind. Remember when you went off on Reagan, calling him a senile old man? I still chuckle over that one. It certainly made me feel better for never having voted Republican, because I knew how you, & Granddad, & Great-Granddad had all believed very strongly in the old GOP. It’s probably a good thing you’re past politics now. The compassion–love, really–that you felt for others, especially those who were struggling just to get by, doesn’t have much place in politics now, Republican & Democrat alike. I think you’d be disgusted with the whole lot.

Mostly I miss talking to you about faith, though. Growing up the son of priest was, honestly, good. Did you know that watching you all those Sundays in church–saying Mass, preaching, talking to parishioners, even singing in your (somewhat off-key) voice–built up such a love of God that even getting sent to war wouldn’t shake it? Somehow, I don’t think you did. You weren’t the kind of dad who preached tohis kids; you were the kind whose life was homily enough. Without ever putting it into words, you taught me that our faith goes far beyond the details of canon and dogma. You taught me that our faith is but a path to a transcendent spiritual life. Now that I think of it, I can’t recall a time outside of Sunday services in which I saw you pray, though I know you did every day. To me, your life was your prayer, and that taught & affected me more than if you’d insisted on a daily family prayer time.

I remember how we used to talk about the problems in the Episcopal Church, but also about how much we cared about it, too. It was hard for you, I know, having been pushed aside by so many of your brother & sister priests, just because you hadn’t gone to seminary. You had such wisdom to share, both spiritual and worldly, and those who listened to you were always touched & moved. And you never wanted to climb the ladder of church hierarchy, so you never engaged in the politicking that is truly a blemish on the church (all churches, in fact). I know it hurt, though; after having dedicated so much of yourself to the church, and having sacrificed so much that affected your family, you ended your priesthood feeling largely ignored by all but a few. We’re only human, aren’t we? I wish with all my heart that in your last years you had felt the same appreciation & gratitude from the institution that you served as you did from the hundreds of men & women whose lives you touched. It wasn’t fair.

You know, of course, that I’m Roman Catholic now. I made my journey to Rome after you left us for quite a few reasons, but principle among them was because of what you taught me (again, by example) about the beauty and spiritual depth of the Mass. I came to know it as a time when the separation between this world and the next is much less distinct, that it is a moment in time when Heaven and Earth become one, even if it’s for a brief moment as we reckon time. I no longer felt that in the Episcopal churches I went to. Whenever Anne & I went to Mass in a Catholic church, I did. Then Mom told me, shortly after you left us, about your friendship with the Catholic priest in Madras, how you had wished you could have gone to Mass at St. Patrick’s, and how, if you were younger, you might have made the conversion yourself. I knew that I could make the change without regret (just like Mom did, later). Sort of like having your permission, I suppose, to do what I felt was right. And it has been right, Dad. I still feel the same awe and wonder now that I did when I was just a boy watching you at the altar. Sometimes, in fact, I feel as if you are there in front of me at the altar still.

You & Mom were active with the Anglican Society of St. Francis after I left home. Now that I’m a Secular Franciscan in the Order that Francis founded nearly 800 years ago, I’ve come to better understand what you (& Mom) felt in those years. You’d already been a priest of twenty years by then, and you knew what was important about faith and what was merely packaging. I understand now how you saw, like Francis, that a Christian’s life should be both prayer and a sermon. I’m afraid I’m not very good at it, but I’m trying to learn. You were a good example. By the way, say “hi” to Francis for me.

There are some other things, Dad, that I wish I could talk to you about, things that we never discussed back then. I know you were proud of me for serving in the military, but I wish I knew if it was a qualified pride. I think I understand now why you went back into the Army when Korea started up. You joined the Army in 1944, but that was too late to have served overseas in WWII. I’m guessing that you returned to the Army because you felt your wartime service was incomplete. Did you go to Korea because you needed to go to war after so many hundreds of thousands of men had before you? You had deferments in the 1940s because you worked in the packing industry, vital to the war effort. Did you feel guilty because you stayed home with your wife and two small children while so many others left for Europe & the Pacific? I wish I would have asked you that (not that you would have necessarily told me).

When I was called up for Iraq, I admit that a part of me was excited. This is what I’d trained for, after all. But I was also deeply torn, knowing that Anne & our kids were going to be here worrying about and waiting for me. I was at odds with myself, and I wish I could have talked to you about how you confronted that same quandary. I’ve felt a deep and pervasive guilt almost since the moment I was mobilized seven years ago this week. Did you feel that, too?

When I was in Iraq, I confronted the darker side of myself, of my nation, and of humanity. I’m still trying to sort out what I feel about all that. I’m guessing you confronted the same feelings. It changes the way one lives his life, knowing that the image we have of ourselves & others too often ignores the reality of what we are capable of doing. Like you, I didn’t serve in the worst of it. Like you, though, I felt my participation in war very deeply.

Looking back on my boyhood and the early years of my adult life, I can recall a number of things about you, Dad, that lead me to believe that you, too, struggled with PTSD. No one talked about it in your day, unfortunately, and that silence must have been very difficult to bear. I can see, though, how hard you worked to notstay turned inwards all the time. I can see how you avoided situations that you knew would make you angry. I can see that you struggled with depression (you never would have admitted it). I wonder: did you have nights when you cried over what you’d lost? Were there times when you felt a soul-deep despair over the ignorance & brutality of humanity? Were there times when you wished for your life to be over sooner rather than later? I’ll never know in this life, but I suspect that you felt these things, and others, just as I do.

Remember in 1966 when you took me to the funeral of the young soldier killed in Vietnam? I know now that you wanted me to see the real price of war. Thank you, Dad.

There’s so much more I wish that I could discuss with you, Dad. Even here in my 50s, I still need you. But even though we can’t sit down at the table & talk about things heavy & light, I know you’re not very far away. I want you to know that you have given me the strength & love & faith to not simply endure life but to actually live it. Thanks, Dad. I love you.

Andy