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Not all encounters created terrible memories |
Some 2023 Memorial Holiday Thoughts from Grays Hollow
For once, the approaching
holiday here on Grand Lake will not be featuring high water that will require
special attention in the name of safety. So we can ponder other pressing
thoughts like to blog or not to blog. Thanks to encouragement from our friends
at American Bank of Oklahoma in Disney, most specifically Stacy Landon, we’re prepared to increase our time
investment in Grand Times on Grand Lake with yours truly. Thanks to the American
Bank Sponsorship many of you will receive our blog via e-mail, if this isn’t of
your liking the unsubscribe button is always an option….The Memorial Holiday is
dead ahead and here we come ready or not
This particular holiday has a
special reason for being on the calendar, as it was originally established to
honor those who perished, on both sides, during the civil war. Memorial
Day always stirs memories of my own military service, friends lost along the
way and lessons learned.
If I have ever grown up,
which is doubted by many, credit needs to be extended to three major influences
in my life. My parents were a major influence with respect to those things we
learn during our youth which many call the formative years. They implanted
values that have proven their worth throughout my life. The Bell System
provided me with my first real experience in the corporate world, but the
entity which probably influenced my life the most is the United States Marine
Corps.
As a typical near
“Baby-boomer,” who never wanted for much of anything throughout the first
twenty-two years of life, I didn’t perceive my enlistment in the Marine Corps
as much more of an obstacle than anything else I had encountered in my short
life. I was in for a rather abrupt introduction to life in the corps.
My drill instructor really
didn’t care who my daddy was, whether our family was poverty stricken, embedded
in the upper middle class or wealthy. All he was interested in doing was
breaking me and my fellow recruits down to zero resistance and then molding us
into Marines. Until he completed the task at hand, we were known as slime
balls, pukes and several unprintable names, but never a United States Marine
until we graduated from boot camp. We had been transformed from a value of
nothing in the all knowing eyes of our drill instructor to a valued asset of our
country. And the common thread which now bound us together was simply this; the
goal of the group always exceeded that of the individual.
I have always felt the
lessons I learned as a leatherneck have served me well throughout my life. The
emphasis on commitment, loyalty to others, discipline and sacrifice are not
taught in any college classroom I’m aware of. I know of no better way to come
to realize what a great nation this is than to spend some time in a faraway
place where the things we take for granted are unheard of. My time in Corps was
well spent with a return on investment which is difficult to calculate by
today’s standards or lack thereof. But one thing that is easily embraced is the
importance of those who came before us and paid the ultimate sacrifice for the
way of life we enjoy today.
Regardless of the branch of
service, we owe a great deal of gratitude to all of our veterans who answered
the call. On this holiday, I would suggest at least a moment of silence to pay
homage to those who gave their lives to preserve the greatest nation on the
planet. The number of Americans, who saw action on D-Day to initiate the
liberation of Europe or stormed the beaches at Iwo Jima, Guadal Canal, Saipan
and many other distant places is dwindling. Many of today’s now generation perceive
the scenes portrayed in the “Saving of Private Ryan” as merely a Hollywood
production to sell movie goers tickets for a profit. The real stars of those
portrayed scenes are receiving orders for a different campaign in a different
locale at a rapid rate. We can’t acknowledge their contributions soon enough.
We can now add places like
Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan to the many places that have placed our
troops in harm’s way. The lives surrendered there are of no less importance
than those given in any other war. It warms my heart to see the outpouring of
support for our service personnel in the way of internet posts and other ways
of showing support for a thankless job once again well done.
For those currently embracing
the mumblings of some politicians and talking heads about isolationism, perhaps
a chat with a Pearl Harbor vet, while there still are some, might be in order.
Or perhaps a cruise beneath the Golden Gate Bridge, to view the gun positions
installed to protect San Francisco from a possible Pacific invasion, just might
open some eyes. On this holiday, originally intended to honor the loss of life
on both sides during the Civil War and later expanded to include much, much
more, let’s take time for a well-deserved salute, American style.
For me, my Marine Corps roots
are special and I can still remember the incessant laughing of my uncle Kermit,
a USMC veteran of the invasions at Iwo Jima and Guadal Canal, when I proudly
told him I had enlisted in the Corps. Perhaps I was just destined to serve in
an organization which was born in a tavern a year prior to the Declaration of our
country’s Independence. Just goes to show you that not all ideas conceived in a
bar are bad. Perhaps I’ll visit Tun Tavern in Philadelphia someday……If only
those walls could talk. And I’ll raise my glass of Scotch, of course, and
proclaim to all those present or who have frequented the tavern in the past.
“Here’s to checks for wars, written by politicians and cashed by the men and
women wearing the uniform of the United States of America.”
See Ya’ Around the
Pond!!
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