11.10.2009

It Was Just the Thing You Did When You Believed in Freedom

My uncle kept WWII in his heart until the day he died.

He didn't talk about it unless prodded,
and even then not much;
he'd saved the lives of several men he served with -
just the thing you did, you know,
this is America, after all, he would tell you,
worth every misery in every foxhole.
Freedom.
Like they say, not free.
There were medals and silence.

He died years ago,
fighting cancer from a private foxhole and losing.
The morphine took him back to war
and his silence was loosened,
his fears returned;
when my mother visited him in the nursing home,
she once found him in a supply closet
down the hall from his room.
Waiting for the enemy.
Ssshhh, he told her, they will hear.

Yes.
They will.
So let them hear our courage,
our belief in freedom,
our footsteps on the road.
Walking with conviction.
Walking with knowledge.
Walking with the ghosts of those who have given all.

Thank you.
Thank you all.
thank you thank you thank you

12 comments:

hele November 11, 2009 4:16 AM  

this is my day for posts linking up - i read this poem just before i read you:

“Sing Your Songs”

Sing your songs,
Children of the Earth…
You, whose voices
have been shut down,
silenced.

Sing your songs,
Children of the Earth…
You, who have lost hope,
given up on a world
that has given up on you.

Sing your songs,
Children of the Earth…
Sing the world awake
from its terrible slumber.
Sing the world
into healing,
re-weaving the threads
of a torn fabric.

Sing your songs,
Children of the Earth…
sing at the top of your lungs,
from the roof-tops
as we plant gardens
and dance rhythms
only you know…
inviting others to remember.

Sing your songs,
Children of the Earth…
Sing loudly,
Sing proudly.
Hold your heads high
and your hearts wide open.

Sing your songs,
Children of the Earth…
and teach us all to sing
the song…
of healing…

your words always remind me to sing.

http://juliabutterflyhill.wordpress.com/

:: elk :: November 11, 2009 7:23 AM  

strong and soft all in one post

glnroz November 11, 2009 9:38 AM  

No, dont thank, me... We thank him and you for this post......

PixieDust November 11, 2009 5:59 PM  

What a beautiful tribute to the most overlooked heroes... my father also served in WWll, and I'm sure he's toasting your uncle now...

:-)

(((hugs))),
love,
me

Tammie Lee November 11, 2009 9:38 PM  

freedom and liberty
thank you for sharing this tender story~

pERIWiNKLe November 12, 2009 10:15 AM  

Beautifully written...but then...all you touch turn into beauty...

heroes...absolutely...how lucky we are xx

Christina November 12, 2009 3:09 PM  

and we remember him, with thanks and gratitude.
xo

Paula Scott November 13, 2009 12:06 AM  

I am always in awe of those that have the courage and conviction to fight for our country for for total strangers.

Here's a great story at this link:

http://docs.google.com/Doc?docid=0AaWYuIUuiYxPZGhyc2t2OG1fMTAxZGdxM2t0Mng&hl=en

Amy November 13, 2009 6:11 PM  

unbelievably powerful. My grandparents never talked about their lives, and it is only in the last two years (after my grandfather's death, and with my grandmother not far from it now) that I have learned that my grandfather was drafted only two months after they got married. There is so much of my family history that has been lost with him, and so much more I want to know.

Laura Hegfield November 15, 2009 2:32 PM  

beautiful straight from your heart! thanks for sharing this loving story/poem!

maddie November 16, 2009 9:56 AM  

oh.....thank you

thank you dear heart.

Jaime November 16, 2009 1:40 PM  

My grandfather died a few years ago. We were very close. He would tell stories of his youth, of his experiences in the war...sometimes he would tell them over and over again, not realising that he had already told you that story several times before. But I loved it. I loved every story, no matter how many times he told them. And it makes me miss him so much...there are so many things I wish I had asked him, but I am grateful to have been given a glimpse into his life. Over and over.

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