#battlefieldsilence
When the thunder stops,
it doesn’t feel like victory.
It feels like someone
turned the world down too quickly,
leaving your ears ringing
and your thoughts louder
than you’d like them to be.
The gun sits quiet,
steam rising from the barrel
like it’s exhaling after a long argument.
The lads move slower now,
not tired exactly —
just coming down
from that place your mind goes
when everything depends
on getting it right.
You check the kit,
check the lads,
check the gun —
not because you’re told to,
but because it’s habit,
and habit is what keeps you alive.
There’s a strange peace
in the moments after firing.
Not calm —
calm is too soft a word.
More like a truce
between you and the world,
a brief pause
before someone decides
to start the noise again.
You feel the weight of it then —
the responsibility,
the trust,
the knowledge that your work
reached further than your eyes could see.
Somewhere out there,
men moved because you fired,
men lived because you were accurate,
and the ground shook
because you made it so.
No one talks much.
There’s nothing to say.
A nod here,
a half smile there,
the kind of quiet
that only comes from lads
who’ve shared something
bigger than themselves.
After the thunder,
you don’t feel like a hero.
You feel like a gunner —
a man who did his job,
stood his ground,
and earned the right
to breathe a little easier
until the next call comes.
Feb 14
Feb 14, 2026 at 9:48 AM UTC