#battlefieldcraft
There’s nothing elegant about flying a gun.
It’s not some parade trick
or a bit of fancy soldiering
for the cameras.
It’s noise, rotor wash,
and the kind of organised chaos
that only works
because every man involved
knows exactly what he’s doing.
The Marines would be forming up,
faces blacked,
bergen straps tight,
ready to drop into whatever trouble
the world had lined up for them.
And there we were —
Maiwand Battery —
getting the gun ready
to follow them in.
Straps checked,
pins secured,
charge bags sealed tight
because if anything must stay dry
in this world,
it’s them.
Six charges,
six distances,
six ways to reach out
and remind the enemy
they’re not alone.
The helicopter would thunder in,
kicking up half the landscape,
and you’d feel the adrenaline
before the wind even hit you.
Hands steady,
eyes sharp,
every movement rehearsed
a hundred times
because mistakes in the air
don’t get second chances.
Then the lift —
the gun rising like it’s reluctant,
swinging under the bird
as if it’s thinking about misbehaving.
You guide it,
steady it,
talk to it under your breath
like it’s a stubborn mule
you’ve known for years.
And just like that,
she’s airborne —
your gun,
your lifeline,
your responsibility —
hanging beneath a helicopter
on her way to a fight
you haven’t even seen yet.
You follow after,
boots on the deck,
heart thumping,
knowing that when you land
and the Marines push forward,
they’ll be counting on you
to bring the thunder
exactly where it’s needed.
Airborne guns aren’t about glory.
They’re about trust —
theirs in you,
yours in the gun,
and all of you
in the chains holding it aloft.
Feb 14
Feb 14, 2026 at 9:36 AM UTC