Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
for all the names on that granite wall and many others... I  Prelude Vietnam broke my mind. Now it runs like a cheap watch always leaping about in time. It pulls me backward into strange visions of a world gone mad. My life is time borrowed from corpses. It is hard to lead your life while you are stuck in another. Time, the great healer, only seems to make this worse. Self-medication, legal meditation, nothing seems strong enough to stop the pounding of the rotors, the screams of the men and the monkeys. I have never been able to **** the demons hidden in the tree lines of my mind. Forty-three years later I'm still hiding nauseous and naked in the napalmed jungle. But my high mileage body clings to life: the quest for immortality knows no shame. Now I am a poet drunk on words, stumbling over the illusion of art. The more I know of language, the less I understand life and loss. And still the mortars rain down in an eternal, inescapable monsoon. II Place Imagine a land that smells entirely of **** Only 70 miles wide in some places. I flew above the abandoned bases of a war that had been abandoned as well. Places given up to the jungle where 60,000 Americans died for nothing. An implacable enemy that had fought the Japanese and French before us and had no doubt they would prevail. A very beautiful place seen from the air if no one was trying to eradicate you. Skinny children, old women, many ****** A place where real tigers might well leap from ambush and eat you alive and snakes so deadly that once bitten you only got two steps before death. Breathtaking sunsets and sunrises. And the possibility of doom everywhere. Rice paddies, mountains, triple canopy jungle. Gorgeous beaches and an ocean laden with sharks and sea snakes for company. A place where death picked his teeth and smiled. III Action Stark terror is the mother of combat; the rage of Peleus son Achilles drives the soldier into the filed teeth of impossibly horrible situations. Not for America or the Stars and Stripes but for the man next to you whom you probably didn't even know. Never ask why one man dies and the one beside him lives on. I shot an NVA regular from 20 feet with a Colt Model 1911 45 automatic. Got him exactly in the chest. He looked very surprised to be dead. I was surprised I didn't miss. At An Loc a Huey 20 yards from mine loaded with 18 hopeful human beings took a rocket up the *** and disintegrated into a debris cloud of metal fragments and pink mist. No bodies to be bothered with, no pieces large enough to identify. A CIA officer executing the wounded. A tame **** torturing his countryman. The exquisitely horrific moment when you know you are falling, not flying. The partner cut in half by a machine gun five feet from where I stood. Do not try to make any sense of this. Fall back on the mantra: don't mean nothing. Cling to that and you may stay sane. Apparently, God was busy for ten years and never bothered to visit Vietnam. IV Comrades Forget that band of brothers ******** we were more like a desperate rabble with no one to count on but each other. Sometimes a brother shares the blood in your veins; sometimes you know him by the blood that flows from his. You scream, you curse, you try so hard and he dies like a huge baby in your arms. Vietnam was a club you could only join by being there deep in the **** Now we are old men but our memberships will never expire until we do. And who will remember us then. V Aftermath Treated like lepers, we slunk home, each to do the best he could. Many died in the denouement of drugs, alcohol, homelessness, suicide. When I got home I wanted to be alone, to be with people, lots of ***** but only with no emotion attached, an ocean of Jack Daniels, lines of coke, mountains of *** electro-shock therapy, calm sleep without nightmares and sometimes the comfort of a quick death. Not much different than most I think. Saigon fell. *Don't mean ******* nothing.* Only some of us remember and want you to know so you won't be fooled again.
0
Aug 14, 2015
Aug 14, 2015 at 12:04 PM UTC
Vietnam Suite
for all the names on that granite wall and many others... I  Prelude Vietnam broke my mind. Now it runs like a cheap watch always leaping about in time. It pulls me backward into strange visions of a world gone mad. My life is time borrowed from corpses. It is hard to lead your life while you are stuck in another. Time, the great healer, only seems to make this worse. Self-medication, legal meditation, nothing seems strong enough to stop the pounding of the rotors, the screams of the men and the monkeys. I have never been able to **** the demons hidden in the tree lines of my mind. Forty-three years later I'm still hiding nauseous and naked in the napalmed jungle. But my high mileage body clings to life: the quest for immortality knows no shame. Now I am a poet drunk on words, stumbling over the illusion of art. The more I know of language, the less I understand life and loss. And still the mortars rain down in an eternal, inescapable monsoon. II Place Imagine a land that smells entirely of **** Only 70 miles wide in some places. I flew above the abandoned bases of a war that had been abandoned as well. Places given up to the jungle where 60,000 Americans died for nothing. An implacable enemy that had fought the Japanese and French before us and had no doubt they would prevail. A very beautiful place seen from the air if no one was trying to eradicate you. Skinny children, old women, many ****** A place where real tigers might well leap from ambush and eat you alive and snakes so deadly that once bitten you only got two steps before death. Breathtaking sunsets and sunrises. And the possibility of doom everywhere. Rice paddies, mountains, triple canopy jungle. Gorgeous beaches and an ocean laden with sharks and sea snakes for company. A place where death picked his teeth and smiled. III Action Stark terror is the mother of combat; the rage of Peleus son Achilles drives the soldier into the filed teeth of impossibly horrible situations. Not for America or the Stars and Stripes but for the man next to you whom you probably didn't even know. Never ask why one man dies and the one beside him lives on. I shot an NVA regular from 20 feet with a Colt Model 1911 45 automatic. Got him exactly in the chest. He looked very surprised to be dead. I was surprised I didn't miss. At An Loc a Huey 20 yards from mine loaded with 18 hopeful human beings took a rocket up the *** and disintegrated into a debris cloud of metal fragments and pink mist. No bodies to be bothered with, no pieces large enough to identify. A CIA officer executing the wounded. A tame **** torturing his countryman. The exquisitely horrific moment when you know you are falling, not flying. The partner cut in half by a machine gun five feet from where I stood. Do not try to make any sense of this. Fall back on the mantra: don't mean nothing. Cling to that and you may stay sane. Apparently, God was busy for ten years and never bothered to visit Vietnam. IV Comrades Forget that band of brothers ******** we were more like a desperate rabble with no one to count on but each other. Sometimes a brother shares the blood in your veins; sometimes you know him by the blood that flows from his. You scream, you curse, you try so hard and he dies like a huge baby in your arms. Vietnam was a club you could only join by being there deep in the **** Now we are old men but our memberships will never expire until we do. And who will remember us then. V Aftermath Treated like lepers, we slunk home, each to do the best he could. Many died in the denouement of drugs, alcohol, homelessness, suicide. When I got home I wanted to be alone, to be with people, lots of ***** but only with no emotion attached, an ocean of Jack Daniels, lines of coke, mountains of *** electro-shock therapy, calm sleep without nightmares and sometimes the comfort of a quick death. Not much different than most I think. Saigon fell. *Don't mean ******* nothing.* Only some of us remember and want you to know so you won't be fooled again.
Forget the past and it will bite you in the *** Some stories demand to be told and heard. Like slavery, Vietnam will haunt America until it recognizes the great evil that was done. Evil can never be wished away.
mike-essig
Written by
Aug 14, 2015
Aug 14, 2015 at 12:04 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem